Solitary Clematis, Solitary Virgin's-Bower Clematis integrifolia - Anemone integrifolia, Clematis elongata, Clematis inclinata, Clematis nutans, Clematitis integrifolia, Coriflora integrifolia, Valvaria integrifolia

Detailed Listing For
Botanical Name:

Clematis integrifolia

Family:

Ranunculaceae

Genus:

Clematis

Species:

integrifolia

Common Name:

Solitary Clematis, Solitary Virgin's-Bower

Seeds Per Pound:
75,600
Quantity:
0.17 lb
Germination:
91%
Germination Test Type:
Cut (Full Seed)
Purity:
99%
Height:
1-2 ft
Collection Locale:
Germany
Crop Year:
2023
Minimum Hardiness Zone:
4
Harvest hemisphere:
Northern
In Stock: 0.17 lb
Prices
Growing Info, follow in order:
Scarification: Soak in water, let stand in water for 24 hours.
Stratification: cold stratify for 90 days.
Germination: sow seed 1/16" deep, tamp the soil, mulch the seed bed.
Other: germination may be delayed for up to 90 days.
In a Nutshell:
* Clematis integrifolia is a flowering vine of the genus Clematis. Like many members of that genus, it is prized by gardeners for its showy flowers. C. integrifolia bears nodding, urn-shaped blue flowers in summer that are 1.5 inches wide. It is a fairly short variety, growing only to 3 feet high. It is native to Europe and Asia, in the USA it grows best in American Horticultural Society zones 8 to 1. more...
* Native to shrubby areas, meadows and stream banks from central Europe to Russia and China, solitary clematis is a woody-based, erect-stemmed, non-climbing clematis that typically grows in a dense, somewhat sprawling, shrubby mound to 12-18” tall. Solitary, violet to blue, nodding, bell-shaped flowers with recurved and often twisted sepals and creamy white anthers bloom from May to July, with continued sporadic bloom sometimes occurring throughout the rest of the summer. more...
* An herbaceous perennial that sends up new stems each spring, each shoot emerging from leaf pairs like clasped hands, to culminate in 1 1/2 " down-facing blue flowers with reflexed petals, native to Europe and Asia.
Usda description:
More info on http://plants.usda.gov