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Campsis radicans (Cool foliage, hot, brick-orange trumpet flowers)
A. The native trumpet vine, Campsis radicans, does not flower well until quite large, so it is not considered a good candidate for container growing.
A native of East Asia, China and Japan it is less hardy than its relative Campsis radicans.
Another reader writes: "My plantings of Campsis radicans, in the ground for two years and not heavily nitrogen-fed, are all leaves and no flowers.
Campsis radicans (Trumpet Vine) of the trumpet-creeper family (Bignoniaceae)
The larvae feed on Campsis radicans, Tecoma stans and introduced Tecomaria capensis.
Campsis radicans (Trumpet Creeper)
Campsis radicans (L.)Seem.
This particular cultivar of the trumpet creeper is a hybrid form of the popular climber, Campsis radicans, and is often selected because it has beautiful salmon-red flowers.
Campsis x tagliabuana 'Madame Galen' is a mid-19th century hybrid between Campsis radicans (American trumpet vine) and Campsis grandiflora (Chinese trumpet vine).
The larvae feed on Olea europaea, Ligustrum vulgare, Jasminum polyanthum, Campsis radicans, Tecoma stans, Lonicera japonica, Cotoneaster species, Antirrhinum majus and Clerodendrum paniculatum.
It is a Chinese trumpet vine, Campsis grandiflora, a near relative of our native trumpet vine, Campsis radicans, which though bright and perky in late summer with its tubular orange flowers, is as common as crabgrass.
Campsis radicans (trumpet vine or trumpet creeper, also known in North America as "cow itch vine" or "hummingbird vine"), is a large and vigorous deciduous woody perennial vine of the family Bignoniaceae, notable for its showy trumpet-shaped flowers.