No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveClock Vine, a Beautiful Climber

Clock Vine, a Beautiful Climber

Are you looking for an ornamental to cover that fence bordering your neighbor for a bit more privacy? Here’s just what you’re looking for to do the job.

Clock vine or sky vine (Thunbergia grandiflora), known as Emperatriz Eugenia in Spanish, is a prolific, dense, screening vine for patio walls, trellises and fences, which blooms nearly year-round with beautiful sky-blue flowers. You’ll also find that the flowers make an ideal addition to any flower arrangement.

Originally from the Old World tropics, this plant has adapted well here in the tropical Americas. In fact, you can occasionally find clock vine growing in the wild along forests where it often climbs high into the canopy of trees.

It’s easy to identify clock vine with its opposite, dark-green leaves with pointed tips and toothed edges. The funnel-shaped flowers have five lobed, pastel-blue petals and a yellow throat.

Nurseries around the country offer clock vine and several relatives. T. erecta is a small shrub with blue-purple flowers, though some varieties bear white flowers (T. fragrans). T. alata is a vine with yellow flowers with dark-brown centers and is often called black-eyed Susan.

These hardy plants grow well in the coastal and intermediate regions of Costa Rica and are practically free of pests and diseases, making them ideal eco-ornamentals for the home garden. They grow best in full sun for optimal flowering and need welldrained, average soil. Unfortunately, they will not tolerate salt breezes in the beach areas of the country.

If you are a gardener who enjoys starting your own plants, you’ll find it’s easy to propagate clock vine by seeds, cuttings or layering. Most Ticos are more than willing to regalar (give) seeds or cuttings from their backyard plants.

The seeds or cuttings can be started in the greenhouse in plastic nursery bags filled with prepared potting soil. Keep them well watered until they germinate. Move them into the sun as they grow, and transplant them to permanent sites before they become root-bound.

Remember that you’ll need a trellis, fence or wall for the vines to grow on, except for T. alata, which is a shrub-like ornamental and is often grown in large containers around the home.

Once clock vines are well established, you will need to prune them regularly to keep them in bounds. It’s not uncommon for unattended vines to escape and cover nearby trees or shrubs.

During the dry season, these plants need a light, weekly watering to keep them vibrant and blooming. Apart from this, you’ll find your clock vine ornamental a care-free companion in the home garden.

 

Trending Now

Costa Rica Capital Reverses Course on Restaurant and Bar Restriction

San José’s municipal government is moving to discard a proposed entertainment regulation that would have restricted dancing, live music, DJs and karaoke at restaurants...

Costa Rica’s Guanacaste Airport Gets First Direct Washington D.C. Flights

Costa Rica's Guanacaste airport in Liberia will receive its first nonstop flights from the Washington, D.C. area this December, giving travelers from the U.S....

Costa Rican Animal Rescuers Join Venezuela Earthquake Relief Effort

Four Costa Rican animal rescuers are part of a nine-person disaster response team deployed to northern Venezuela to help dogs, cats and other animals...

How Costa Rica’s Forest Recycled a Dead Deer in Just Two Weeks

I probably shouldn’t have done this. That’s what I was thinking as I lay, flat on my back, in the middle of a trail...

Costa Rica’s Small Business Registry Reaches Record Level

The number of micro, small and medium-sized businesses registered with Costa Rica’s Ministry of Economy, Industry and Commerce has nearly doubled over the past...

Chris Hemsworth Trains in Costa Rica Before Returning to Film

Chris Hemsworth has given his millions of followers a closer look at his recent Costa Rica getaway, sharing a workout video filmed during a...

Costa Rica Faces Flood Risk as Tropical Wave Moves Across Today

A tropical wave moving across Costa Rica today is expected to bring yet another round of heavy rain and thunderstorms, with already saturated ground...

US and Canadian Travelers Are Next in Line for Costa Rica’s Airport E-Gates

If you hold a US or Canadian passport, the immigration line at Juan Santamaría may soon stop being the worst part of arriving in...

Costa Rica Airport Delays Hit Travelers on Busiest Return Sunday

If you are flying out of Costa Rica on Monday morning, give yourself an extra hour. A failure in the Judicial Branch platform that...
Avatar
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel