"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." “Mandevillas are easy for the home gardener to grow,” says Maria Bolinger, territory manager for Ball ...
Question: This year I bought and grew a beautiful Mandevilla vine in a pot with a small trellis on my deck. It was stunning and is still blooming like crazy. I know this is a tropical plant. Can I ...
Q: I am trying to winter my mandevilla plant. The ends are getting long and wispy. Should I cut them off or trim them down? — Sue O. A: The long, wispy ends are quite typical of how mandevillas grow ...
Bring your mandevilla indoors when nighttime temperatures are below 50°F. Prune it, inspect it for pests, and treat if necessary before bringing the plant inside. Place the plant in bright, indirect ...
If your trellis is looking bare, or you just love the look of a vine curling around your home or backyard, consider adding a mandevilla plant to add some color and beauty to your space. Not dissimilar ...
In this week's Fielding Questions, Don Kinzler offers tips for treating an ailing hoya plant, wintering mandevilla and more. A reader asks gardening columnist Don Kinzler for advice in treating her ...
Here's a plant you're sure to love. Perhaps you've seen this vine growing in a large wooden barrel and clambering up a small trellis. A quick glance gives the impression of a red-flowered morning ...
Attributes: Shocking pink flowers create a real spectacle on this vigorous, dark-leafed tropical vine. This plant flowers freely all summer, making it the perfect choice for climbing on a trellis or ...
Apricot Mandevilla – My plant did not have a tag when I bought it, but I am guessing it is the Sun Parasol ‘Apricot’ Mandevilla. This is probably my favorite plant of the season. This summer tropical ...
A. Winnie, it’s next to impossible to get a mandevilla to bud and flower indoors. It’s an outdoors tropical plant that needs full sun almost all day long to perform at its best. Now that you have ...
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." While the humidity and heat of summer are a drag to some, your tropical plants are probably loving it.