Hyde Hall Clematis
Clematis ‘Hyde Hall’
Plant Details
USDA Plant Hardiness Zones: 4a-9b Find Your Zone
Plant Type: Flowering Vine
Height or Length at Maturity: 6-10′
Width at Maturity: 3-4′
Spacing: 3-4′ apart to cover fences and walls
Spacing: 3-4′ apart to cover fences and walls
Growth Habit / Form: Climbing, Dense, Twining, Twisted Branching
Growth Rate: Moderate to Fast
Flower Color: White sometimes with flushes of Soft Pink and/or Green and Pinkish-brown anthers
Flower Type: Single
Flower Size: Large, 5-7″
Flowering Period: Late Spring through Summer and Late Sumer through Early Fall
Flowering Period: Late Spring through Summer and Late Sumer through Early Fall
Fragrant Flowers: no
Foliage Color: Green
Fragrant Foliage: no
Sun Needs: Full to Mostly Sun, Morning Sun with Afternoon Shade, Morning Shade with Afternoon Sun, All Day Filtered Sun
Water Needs: Average
Soil Type: Clay (Amend heavy clay to ensure good drainage), Loam, Sandy, Silt
Soil Drainage: Moist but Well Drained
Soil pH: 5.5 – 7.0
Maintenance / Care: Low
Pruning Group: 2
Attracts: Butterflies, Hummingbirds, Beneficial Pollinators, Visual Attention
Resistances: Cold Temperatures (-30F), Deer, Disease, Heat, Humidity, Insect
Description
Named after the garden at the Royal Horticultural Society, ‘Hyde Hall’ is a free-flowering beauty considered to be one the best reblooming white Clematis, and it thrives in either sun or shade! It features abundant, large 5 to 7 inch diameter 6-petaled flowers with wavy-edged pointed white petals surrounding prominent pinkish-brown anthers at the center. Sometimes the petals will be lightly flushed with a soft-green or soft-pink bar. Flowering comes in two waves, the first from late spring through early summer and the second from late summer through early fall. Climbing 6 to 10 feet tall, depending on the height of the support structure, Hyde Hall is ideal for growing on a trellis, fence, arch, pergola or any other structures its vines can twine around. Reliable and easy to grow, this luminescent beauty deserves a spot in every garden where it will grow.
Note: All of our Clematis vines are trellised 2 year old plants in a 1 gallon pot.
Landscape & Garden Uses
Climbing 8 to 10 feet in height with a spread of 3 feet or more, the Hyde Hall Clematis is ideal for growing on arbors, pergolas, fences, trellises, arches, tall obelisks, poles, lamp posts and other structures its vines can twine around. Excellent for pots, planters and other containers for situating on patios, decks and around other outdoor living spaces where the amazing flowers can be viewed and enjoyed from close up. A fine addition to Clematis gardens and white theme gardens.
Suggested Spacing: 3 to 4 feet apart to cover fences, trellises, and walls
Growing Preferences
The Hyde Hall Clematis is easy to grow in a moist but well-drained soil of average fertility and full sun to shade. We suggest a minimum of 2 hours direct sunlight per day, or all-day filtered sun, for best flowering and overall performance. Though it tolerates dry periods when established, it will appreciate an occasional watering in prolonged periods of dry weather.
Clematis Pruning Group 2
Clematis in Group 2 consist of all the early, large-flowered hybrid clematis that bloom in late spring or early summer and maybe again in late summer. Clematis in this group should be pruned lightly in late winter or early spring. Pruning consists of removing weak and crossing shoots then thinning down the plant to a structure of evenly spaced one and two year old stems. Cut each old stem just above a pair of healthy buds. Plants in this group have the tendency to become bare at the base as they mature. You can under-plant with small shrubs or perennials to help conceal the bare stems. Alternatively, you can often force a flush of new growth from the base by cutting the vine back to 18 inches immediately after the bloom.
An alternate method of pruning Group 2 clematis is to prune only every three or four years. In this case, the clematis should be pruned as described for Group 3 Clematis. This will produce a weak first flush of flowers in the summer after pruning.
Helpful Articles
Click on the link below to find helpful advice from our experts on how to plant and care for Clematis vines
How To Plant A Clematis
How To Prune A Clematis
Plant Long & Prosper!
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