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  2. Clematis viridiflora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clematis_viridiflora

    Clematis viridiflora is a species of tall, climbing shrub. Young stems are pubescent but become glabrous, and are longitudinally ribbed and furrowed. [4] Leaves are opposite, five or more foliolate, with leaflets broadly ovate, irregularly lobed and toothed. Flowers range in colour from pale green to yellowish-green. Sepals are thin and ...

  3. Clematis bigelovii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clematis_bigelovii

    Clematis bigelovii is a perennial vine that grows to approximately 2 feet (61 centimeters) in height. [4] Its stems are either erect or twining and sprawling. Leaves are pinnate with 7–11 leaflets. The flowers are terminal, solitary, and bell-shaped. Their sepals are purple, lanceolate, and often with white woolly margins.

  4. Clematis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clematis

    Clematis leaves are food for the caterpillars of some Lepidoptera species, including the willow beauty (Peribatodes rhomboidaria). The timing and location of flowers varies; spring-blooming clematis flower on side shoots of the previous year's stems, summer/fall blooming clematis bloom only on the ends of new stems, and twice-flowering clematis ...

  5. A Stroll Through the Garden: Clematis - the queen of the climbers

    www.aol.com/stroll-garden-clematis-queen...

    Most of the time your clematis will not need pruning, but if you have a healthy plant, you will reach a point like my reader to need to trim the plant in such a way that you get rid of the dead ...

  6. Clematis occidentalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clematis_occidentalis

    Clematis occidentalis produces plume-like fruit. The flowers transform into heads of finely hairy seeds, featuring elongated tail-like structures of about 2 inches in length. As the seeds ripen, they transition from green to rusty brown, while the tails become grey and feathery. The seeds are then dispersed by wind. [2]

  7. Calophoma clematidina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calophoma_clematidina

    Calophoma clematidina is a fungal plant pathogen and the most common cause of the disease clematis wilt affecting large-flowered varieties of Clematis.Symptoms of infection include leaf spotting, wilting of leaves, stems or the whole plant and internal blackening of the stem, often at soil level.

  8. Clematis virginiana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clematis_virginiana

    The leaves are opposite and pinnately compound, trifoliate (3 leaflets) that have coarse unequal teeth on the margins. It produces small dull white flowers of width 13 to 19 mm (1 ⁄ 2 to 3 ⁄ 4 in) from July to September that are faintly sweetly fragrant; sometimes dioecious so that there are separate staminate (male) and pistillate (female ...

  9. Do Bay Leaves Actually Taste Like Anything? - AOL

    www.aol.com/bay-leaves-actually-taste-anything...

    "Like all dry herbs, bay leaves have a short shelf life and, after several months, will lose a lot of their flavor." So what does bay leaf taste like, exactly? Bay leaves are often described as ...