You are reading Dreams Alive Magazine, the Home and Garden Online Magazine - Dig into our helpful gardening articles, tips and ideas. This issues main features include tips on how to attract hummingbirds to your garden and a look at creating your own renaissance garden. Vacation 2005
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Table Of Contents - garden, gardening, articles, ideas, Thomas Leo Ogren, summer pruning, pruning needs, ivy league, Parthenocissus tricuspidata, Boston Ivy, Cottage Ivy, Japanese Ivy, self-clinging vine, tendrils, fastest growing vines, Japanese beetles, home and garden, online magazine, dreams alive magazine In Your Home In Your Garden Art and Literature How To In Every Issue Mind and Spirit Health and Lifestyle Just For Kids Food and Drink Classified Ads
 
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Dig into our helpful gardening articles, tips and ideas. This issues main features include tips on how summer pruning can improve the performance and visual appeal of your favorite trees.

Summer Pruning - Pinch an Inch - If a program of summer pinching is undertaken, the following winter’s dormant pruning needs will normally be minimal, but every few years, make a limited number of large cuts that remove considerable wood and encourage more new growth. Summer Pruning
Thomas Leo Ogren

Pinch an Inch - If a program of summer pinching is undertaken, the following winter’s dormant pruning needs will normally be minimal, but every few years, make a limited number of large cuts that remove considerable wood and encourage more new growth.

 
Garden Remedies -  Growing medicinal herbs turns your garden into a source of both sensual pleasure and improved health. With these useful plants in your garden, you can use the flowers and leaves in infusions and save roots, bark and seeds for decoctions. Garden Remedies
Linda Binns

Growing medicinal herbs turns your garden into a source of both sensual pleasure and improved health. With these useful plants in your garden, you can use the flowers and leaves in infusions and save roots, bark and seeds for decoctions.

 

 

The Ivy League
by Virginia Nature Hills Nursery

Parthenocissus tricuspidata is commonly known as Boston Ivy, Cottage Ivy, or Japanese Ivy. It covers the exterior walls of a number of prestigious northeastern universities and is probably responsible for the term "Ivy League." Boston Ivy is a deciduous, self-clinging vine with large (to 4-8 inches) glossy leaves. The color of the leaves changes with the season starting with light green in spring, dark green in summer, and peach to scarlet crimson in fall.

The Boston Ivy vine has tendrils that have 5 to 8 branches, each of which ends with an adhesive-like tip. It secretes calcium carbonate, which serves as an adhesive and gives it the ability to attach itself to a wall without requiring any additional support. It can be easy to confuse this plant with evergreen English Ivy, which clings much tighter to a surface. Boston Ivy will grow along the ground but the vine loves to climb the brick or stone walls of buildings. A north or east wall works the best. It can get spread 30-60 feet and is one of the fastest growing vines. Other than buildings, it will also climb tree trunks, arbors, trellises or retaining walls. In addition to growing it on walls you can use Boston Ivy for screening or camouflage. It is a tough vine that tolerates urban settings, is salt tolerant, and easily handles most conditions including shade and drought. This fast-growing vine is hardy from USDA Zones 4 to 10 but does best in climates with cool summer nights.

Boston Ivy flowers are small, green, and difficult to locate. They develop into blue-black berries on red stalks, which become apparent after the leaves fall. Birds typically consume the berries before winter arrives. The foliage of Boston Ivy looks similar to maple leaves, especially when it turns deep red in autumn. It is usually pest-free but Japanese beetles can damage leaves in the sunshine. This ivy makes an excellent backdrop for summer flowers, especially reds, yellows, oranges, and whites.

Additional information on Boston Ivy can be found online at: http://www.vanursery.com the Virginia Nature Hills Nursery website.

 

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