this post was submitted on 06 Jul 2023
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Gardening

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I built this trellis and planted two varieties of honeysuckle in front of it, maybe 7 years ago, thinking they would mingle and mix. One of them, a Japanese variety, took off, and the other barely grew: after 3 years it had scarcely grown from the potted size I bought it at. Then I began pruning it. This seemed counter intuitive: it had much less foliage than I wanted so why cut what little was there? But it stimulated more growth than it subtracted. And a few years later, the two varieties are now of a comparable size in my hedge! I have a calendar reminder of what time of year to go prune and I do it diligently. Lessons learned!

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[–] The_K 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Be careful. It is considered an invasive plant in midwestern US. It’s presently taking over my back yard.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

I live in the south and there are some species native to the region. They do grow like crazy, but I have a living fence line on the front of my property and would rather something that smells and looks nice there. Plus, they are good for bees and I'm about to get a few hives next spring.