Nature's own hummingbird feeder! Hardy, FAST growing! Hall's Honeysuckle will cover a bank or other area quickly as a ground cover - even in poor soil. Plant it at the base of a trellis and in one season you'll have a lush vine that covers the area completely. You won't believe your nose when you first smell the perfume from its buff-yellow flowers. So sweet
is it, you'll have to stand back in order not to get hit by the
hummingbirds that will flock to it for its sweet nectar. If you have a difficult area where grass and other plants have failed, plant Hall's Honeysuckle for a verdant carpet in a hurry.
Not at all fussy about soil or adverse growing conditions. Grows in sun
or shade. Cover large areas economically! Because it grows so well and
so fast you can space plants as far as 3' apart.
Halls Honeysuckle
Halls Honeysuckle is edible and sweet to the taste. It attracts
hummingbirds, butterflies, and bees. It is best in the spring months,
with yellow and white blooms, and a great scent. Halls Honeysuckle can
be used to stop erosion and will grow easily on fences, trellises, or
any other structure.
Ships As – Bareroot Plant
The honeysuckle vine is hardy and very easy to grow. The woody twining vines have a lovely shade of green leaves that are oval that are 1 to 10 cm in length.
The bilateral symmetrical flowers bloom in pretty clusters on a flowering branch. The flowers are trumpet-shaped and are most notably recognized for their golden orange coloring. They have a sweet scent to them and wonderfully delicious nectar.
The fruiting branches will contain a red, blue or blackberry. Sometimes the berries are spherical to an elongated shape. The berries are mildly poisonous to humans. But are a fantastic attractant of wildlife, such as birds and small mammals, during the fall season. Halls Japanese Honeysuckle is a species of Lonicera, and they are hardy climbers that grow in a shrubby shape with delicate, tiny flowers with elongated petals approximately 1-10 cm long. This plant proliferates in a shrubby-type form covered with the small flowers. Plant at the base of a trellis, and by the end of the season, you’ll have a beautiful flowering vine wholly covered with Honeysuckle. This plant is also used as a ground cover that reaches several feet in height as a bushy-flowered shrub.
Both shrubby and vine-growing stems are robust and fibrous, and, in general, Honeysuckle is famous for its tiny, but fragrant flowers. The flowers are pure white but turn to yellow as they age. They are surrounded by bright green, oval-shaped leaves. Honeysuckle has a long season for blooms; typically, they have flowers from May until the first frost. In the fall, they may have blackberries with purple foliage. Halls Honeysuckle is a nationwide favorite for covering trellises because the plants climb 25 feet or higher.
Halls Japanese Honeysuckle may be popular in America because it is so easy to plant, grow and maintain. Plant a small shrub, and it will tolerate soil in lousy condition and temperatures down to -30 degrees. This shrub will grow abundantly rooted in a partly shaded space with filtered sunlight or full sunlight for the blooms. Even though the Honeysuckle has a rapid growth rate, it has only moderate water needs, and it blooms all season.
Ships As – Bareroot Plant
The honeysuckle vine is hardy and very easy to grow. The woody twining vines have a lovely shade of green leaves that are oval that are 1 to 10 cm in length.
The bilateral symmetrical flowers bloom in pretty clusters on a flowering branch. The flowers are trumpet-shaped and are most notably recognized for their golden orange coloring. They have a sweet scent to them and wonderfully delicious nectar.
The fruiting branches will contain a red, blue or blackberry. Sometimes the berries are spherical to an elongated shape. The berries are mildly poisonous to humans. But are a fantastic attractant of wildlife, such as birds and small mammals, during the fall season. Halls Japanese Honeysuckle is a species of Lonicera, and they are hardy climbers that grow in a shrubby shape with delicate, tiny flowers with elongated petals approximately 1-10 cm long. This plant proliferates in a shrubby-type form covered with the small flowers. Plant at the base of a trellis, and by the end of the season, you’ll have a beautiful flowering vine wholly covered with Honeysuckle. This plant is also used as a ground cover that reaches several feet in height as a bushy-flowered shrub.
Both shrubby and vine-growing stems are robust and fibrous, and, in general, Honeysuckle is famous for its tiny, but fragrant flowers. The flowers are pure white but turn to yellow as they age. They are surrounded by bright green, oval-shaped leaves. Honeysuckle has a long season for blooms; typically, they have flowers from May until the first frost. In the fall, they may have blackberries with purple foliage. Halls Honeysuckle is a nationwide favorite for covering trellises because the plants climb 25 feet or higher.
Halls Japanese Honeysuckle may be popular in America because it is so easy to plant, grow and maintain. Plant a small shrub, and it will tolerate soil in lousy condition and temperatures down to -30 degrees. This shrub will grow abundantly rooted in a partly shaded space with filtered sunlight or full sunlight for the blooms. Even though the Honeysuckle has a rapid growth rate, it has only moderate water needs, and it blooms all season.