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Tibouchina

Discussion in 'General Gardening Discussion' started by sal73, Jun 3, 2013.

  1. sal73

    sal73 Total Gardener

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    Guys my local garden have some tibouchina plants for sale , will they survive winter indoor?

    [​IMG]
     
  2. mowgley

    mowgley Total Gardener

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  3. longk

    longk Total Gardener

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    Definitely! They will croak it outdoors though, and take forever to get going again if kept cool (ie; frost free) over the winter. Indoors (in my conservatory) was best by far.
     
  4. sal73

    sal73 Total Gardener

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    they are sunny loving plants and sunny and uk don`t match ;)

    My Aunty in Zew Zealand had one in her garden and told me that can take 5 to 7 frost every year , but all followed by sunny days and the temperature no less then -2c ...
    should I buy one and see what`s going on????
     
  5. sal73

    sal73 Total Gardener

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    why was , what uppen to it???
     
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    • longk

      longk Total Gardener

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      No conservatory since the move so I left it outdoors in a dry and sheltered spot - it croaked!

      The year before I kept it cool and frost free and took forever to come back into growth. In the conservatory I would let it tick over on the dry side - dropped most of its foliage but would be back in vigorous growth by early April when the daylight hours suited it. If I tried to keep it growing over the winter it would get leggy, so a state of dormancy seemed to work better.
       
    • sal73

      sal73 Total Gardener

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      After posting this thread I gave up the idea of a Tibouchina ,
      strange thing ....today I was working in one of my customer garden , just to find out that he had 3 Tibouchina growing outdoor and about to flower .......
      I couldn`t resist to ask for few cutting .

      Nothing better then observe other peoples garden and find out what they got .
       
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      • Kristen

        Kristen Under gardener

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        The thing that is better than that :heehee: is observing other peoples gardens and finding out what they can give you a bit of :heehee:
         
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        • sal73

          sal73 Total Gardener

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          well , well , well .....the plant I saw at the garden center was £10 so just saved myself a tenner and got more chance to get the plant survive outdoor ;)
           
        • Victoria

          Victoria Lover of Exotic Flora

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          I have not been able to over winter it here ... and I've tried twice! :cry3:
           
        • pete

          pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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          Not somethng I've ever bothered to overwinter.
          It grows like the clappers and gets straggly IMO.#
          Sorry.
           
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          • sal73

            sal73 Total Gardener

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            Victoria , that was a real surprice for myself as well , I`ve asked the owner of the house who did the garden and he told me that he paid a profetional garden for the planting , all the garden was done last year and he told me that he didn`t lost not a single plant .
            actually while i was there I`ve collected few more cutting as well and have to admit that the guy have done a real nice selection of novelty plant ....including a black agapantus and many plants that didn`t even manage to identify (so I had to take few cutting ;) )

            It`s not the usual new garden luck , but someone who know what is doing ....
            what I`ve noticed that they where in a sandy soil , sunny position and carefull placed in a protect spot of the garden .

            the plant wasn`t in perfect shape , but managed to regrow and flowering , that`s a lot to me .

            [​IMG]
             
          • PeterS

            PeterS Total Gardener

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            Mine overwintered quite happily in a frost free greenhouse, and is now growing well again. It was quite tall in its first year, so I can well understand Pete's comment that they can get straggly.
             
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