Post a reply

Image
Apr 10, 2017 11:44 AM CST
Thread OP
North Central Massachusetts (N (Zone 5b)
Life & gardens: make them beautiful
Bee Lover Butterflies Garden Photography Cat Lover Million Pollinator Garden Challenge Region: Massachusetts
Region: Ukraine
Hi all you wonderful clematis lovers. I have a newbie question for you.

I live in north-central Massachusetts, zone 5b. I planted a small, young clematis last fall. The snow is only now disappearing, and I'm looking for new growth. But my clematis looks totally dead. The leaves and stems have died back all the way to the ground, and are not showing any signs of coming back. I do understand that this is a deciduous plant, but I'm wondering what new, emerging, spring growth looks like? Will it come straight up from the soil, or should it come from old wood, which there seems to be none of?

Thanks in advance. If anyone has any pictures of new, emerging growth, I'd love to see them.
You don't kick walls down, you pull the nails out and let them fall.
AKA Joey.
Image
Apr 16, 2017 7:14 AM CST
Name: Anna
North Texas (Zone 8a)
Charter ATP Member Clematis I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Region: Texas Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Garden Ideas: Level 1
Thumb of 2017-04-16/canadanna/301c03
When a clematis is new ( and roots are small), it will be slow to grow. It definitely follows the sleep, creep , leap rule. Likely , you will only see one or two shoots.
Give it some good quality compost and sprinkle some epsom salts to encourage root growth.
Keep us posted
Image
Apr 16, 2017 8:18 AM CST
Thread OP
North Central Massachusetts (N (Zone 5b)
Life & gardens: make them beautiful
Bee Lover Butterflies Garden Photography Cat Lover Million Pollinator Garden Challenge Region: Massachusetts
Region: Ukraine
canadanna said:Thumb of 2017-04-16/canadanna/301c03
When a clematis is new ( and roots are small), it will be slow to grow. It definitely follows the sleep, creep , leap rule. Likely , you will only see one or two shoots.
Give it some good quality compost and sprinkle some epsom salts to encourage root growth.
Keep us posted


Sleep, creep, leap, I love that! I planted two very small plants in the fall. One is showing a tiny bit of green now, but the other....nothing. I'm afraid it's dead. Will update and thank you for the picture and encouragement!
You don't kick walls down, you pull the nails out and let them fall.
AKA Joey.
Image
Apr 20, 2017 8:34 PM CST
Name: Anna
North Texas (Zone 8a)
Charter ATP Member Clematis I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Region: Texas Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Garden Ideas: Level 1
Don't give up....some are slow
Image
Apr 23, 2017 4:45 PM CST
Thread OP
North Central Massachusetts (N (Zone 5b)
Life & gardens: make them beautiful
Bee Lover Butterflies Garden Photography Cat Lover Million Pollinator Garden Challenge Region: Massachusetts
Region: Ukraine
Update! Yaay! As someone said, sleep, creep, leap! So it appears that this one is entering the creep stage! Thank you to everyone for the support and encouragement! This is Clematis Josephine. Nice to meet you CJ!

You don't kick walls down, you pull the nails out and let them fall.
AKA Joey.
Image
Apr 28, 2017 10:01 PM CST
Thread OP
North Central Massachusetts (N (Zone 5b)
Life & gardens: make them beautiful
Bee Lover Butterflies Garden Photography Cat Lover Million Pollinator Garden Challenge Region: Massachusetts
Region: Ukraine
Updating yet again. I think we're in the creep stage now.... I'm so happy to see it reaching upward, baby that it is!

What is the opinion on leaving the rocks around the root area? Should I remove them, or move them outward a bit?

Thumb of 2017-04-29/joannakat/0d7d35
You don't kick walls down, you pull the nails out and let them fall.
AKA Joey.
Only the members of the Members group may reply to this thread.
Member Login:

( No account? Join now! )

Today's site banner is by adknative and is called "Baby Blue Eyes"

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.