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Adorn your porch with colorful vines

Some of our favorite flowering vines produce abundant blooms only in the spring and provide lush green backdrops for the rest of the summer season. Others bloom from summer to autumn with continuous flowering. But one thing they all have in common is that they will climb a trellis with minimal guidance and will stick to walls with little help.

While we have an extensive list of perennial climbers, the following list includes both perennial and annual flowering vines. Keep reading to learn about a number of different climbers that grow quickly and cling to your trellis, walls or pergola. Let’s take a look at some of our favorites, with pictures and details about each one

This evergreen clematis variety has waxy dark green leaves and pale pink and white flowers that have a sweet and slightly almondy scent. The flowers appear in early spring and are often some of the first flowers in a garden.
Blooms only last up to four weeks, but the foliage is attractive and dense enough to form a beautiful trellis or fence that lasts all year. Plus, you don’t need to prune the plant, so it’s an easy-to-grow, low-maintenance choice.
This plant is one of the few vines that you need to skip if you have dogs or if your garden is open for dogs to wander into. Instead, plant it in a fenced garden to keep dogs away as it is highly toxic to dogs.

Black-eyed Susan Vine
Most people don’t think of vines when they think of Black-Eyed Susan, but of the shorter wild-flowered variety. The vine is another species that grows up to 8 feet and spreads quickly up to 6 feet.

Plant the vine in early spring after the last frost to see it climb. It can grow a full 8 feet in one growing season. The vine seeds itself, so you don’t have to worry about replanting or maintenance, but it can take over its share of the garden if you’re not careful.
The leaves have an arrowhead or heart shape and set off the small coral-colored, daisy-like flowers. Also known as bell vine, some tropical areas like Hawaii consider it invasive, so check before planting