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Content
- Wild wine - short and concise in the profile
- An overview of wild wine
- Sunny and sheltered location preferred
- Plant and cultivate wild wine
- Tips
Wild wine is perennial
Wild wine - short and concise in the profile
During the summer months, the wild wine delights with its rich green, glossy foliage and the dense vegetation that reliably grows whole house walls and walls. In autumn, the foliage turns golden red to scarlet and offers the viewer once again an intense color experience just before the hibernation.
An overview of wild wine
Sunny and sheltered location preferred
Basically, Wilder wine is likely to grow at almost any location, even in the shade and on sandy soil. However, the fall color on such a place is not quite as spectacular as on a sunny and sheltered one, and the plant thrives better when it is light and warm. Incidentally, a location oriented to the south or east is best, especially if the soil is nutrient-rich and slightly moist there.
Plant and cultivate wild wine
Except for the common scabbard (Parthenocissus vitacea) Wilder wine does not need any trellises because it adheres to almost any surface with the help of small adhesive tiles. These are very persistent and difficult to remove. It would be advantageous, however, to provide the Wild Wine a fall protection in the form of a cable scaffold o. Ä. - Otherwise, in our latitudes up to 12 meters high and several meters wide plant in case of storm or strong wind could be torn from its base.
Tips
Before you cover your house facade or the garden fence with wild wine, check the surface first for possible damage and cracks. The very fast-growing wild wine has a great destructiveness, as it nestles even in the smallest cracks and thus leverages them over time - the same is true for roof shingles, gutters, etc.