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Yellow Trumpet Creeper

Campsis radicans 'Flava'
Yellow Trumpet Creeper

images/productimages/yellow_trumpet_creepet_2.jpg images/productimages/yellow_trumpet_creepet_3.jpg images/productimages/yellow_trumpet_creeper_4.jpg
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Type
$14.95 each
Buy 4 or more $13.46 each
Buy 25 or more $12.71 each
Item # 801 - 330
Quantity:
Shipping Information
- Shipped In Set Planting Zone for Shipping Time (Top Right)
- Cannot Ship to AK, HI, ID, UT
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Type
$26.95 each
Buy 4 or more $24.25 each
Buy 25 or more $22.91 each
Item # 801 - 331
Quantity:
Shipping Information
- Shipped In Set Planting Zone for Shipping Time (Top Right)
- Cannot Ship to AK, HI, ID, UT
Add to your wish list
Email a Friend
Grows in Zones 4-10 Click for Shipping Details
Plant Types/Container Sizes




Yellow Trumpet Creeper Details:

Plant Facts
Mature Spread
30 x 30 feet
Soil Type
Widely Adaptable
Moisture
Medium Well - Drained
Mature Form
10 - 50 feet
Growth Rate
Fast Spreader
Sun Exposure
Full Sun - Partial Sun
Flower Color
Yellow
Fall Color
Yellow, Green
Flowering Date
Summer
Foliage Color
Green
4-10

The Yellow Trumpet Creeper, Campsis radicans 'Flava', is a rapid growing, clinging vine produces yellow trumpet shaped flowers in the summer months that attract hummingbirds. Trumpet Creepers flower best in a full sun location and it is a tough vine for hot and dry sites. The invasive nature of this plant makes it hard to get rid of but also very hardy.

The abundant sprays of trumpet-shaped yellow flowers cover this deciduous vine for an extra long bloom season. The rapid growth makes training easy and therefore it is excellent for covering fences or arbors. The 'Flava' cultivar is considered by many to be the superior of the species.

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  trumpet vine question, 9/1/2006 7:36:47 PM
Reviewer: redrobin
I have a question regarding the trumpet vine , we have rather large pods coming from inside the flowers what are we to do with them ? shoud we take them off and plant them? let them fall where they may? are there seeds in them? if we break them open do we then plant them or what? Thank you

Answer from Nature Hills: It’s a vine and I think one plant is enough; you can leave them on the plant and let mother nature do her thing.


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