Advice for the Home Gardener from the Help Desk of the
UC Master Gardener Program of Contra Costa County
Client's Request: My Bougainvillea is five years old, but it has never bloomed. What should I do?
MGCC Help Desk Response: Thank you for contacting the UC Master Gardener Program Help Desk with your question about your non-blooming Bougainvillea. Based on the fact that your plant is five years old and hasn't bloomed, we find there are a few things to consider.
Second, for great color and abundant blossoms, it is recommended that you feed your plant. According to our research, hibiscus or Bougainvillea food are a good choice for Bougainvillea because of the inclusion of iron and other micro-nutrients these plants need. If you use other types of fertilizer, read your fertilizer label and make sure that the first number is lower (nitrogen amount) and follow the directions for application. The (higher) nitrogen content of the fertilizer you use may be what is causing your vibrant flush of green leaves and no flowers!
Third, Bougainvillea are drought tolerant once they are established. However, they like to be watered deeply and then allowed to dry out. They do not like wet soil, so drainage is important whether you plant them in the ground or in a pot. If you plant in a pot, do not use a saucer or water dish. Too much water or waterlogged roots can cause bracts to drop, or your plant to stop blooming completely.
Finally, Bougainvillea bloom on new wood so pruning and pinching are important. Pruning can be done at any time of the year, and is used to shape the plant. Bougainvillea can be pruned hard to restrict growth, and stems can be pruned to create branching. Shaping your plant depends on if you want it to grow aggressively for a hedge, or vertically to cover a trellis, or want it to be full, bushy and overflowing for a pot. Pinching is also important. Pinching is the method of removing the soft, growing tips of young plant stems to encourage fuller growth. The more you pinch, the more your bougainvillea will branch and bloom, so prune and pinch after a flowering cycle has completed.
Here are links to free UC information for optimum conditions for growth and common pests of these plants:
http://ipm.ucanr.edu/PMG/GARDEN/PLANTS/bougainvillea.html
http://ucanr.edu/blogs/napanewspaper/index.cfm?tagname=bougainvillea
One cultivar that many gardeners are able to grow successfully in Contra Costa County partly due to its frost hardiness: Bougainvillea 'San Diego Red' is evergreen and grows to 15–30' tall. ‘San Diego Red' is one of the most cold-tolerant Bougainvillea available with lipstick-red bracts. It is known for its ability to cope with the occasional freeze; it has been noted as hardy down to 20°F.
Good luck with getting your Bougainvillea to bloom! These lovely plants are definitely worth the effort to grow!
Please let us know if you have any additional questions.
Help Desk of the UC Master Gardener Program of Contra Costa County (SLH)
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Note: UC Master Gardeners Program of Contra Costa's Help Desk is available almost year-round to answer your gardening questions. Except for a few holidays (e.g., last 2 weeks December), we're open every week, Monday through Thursday for walk-ins from 9:00 am to Noon at 2380 Bisso Lane, Concord, CA 94520. We can also be reached via telephone: (925) 608-6683, email: ccmg@ucanr.edu, or on the web at http://ccmg.ucanr.edu/Ask_Us/. MGCC Blogs can be found at http://ccmg.ucanr.edu/HortCoCo/ You can also subscribe to the Blog (//ucanr.edu/blogs/CCMGBlog/)
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Bougainvillea ( Bougainvillea spp.) are tropical vines from Brazil that are happiest close to the Equator, so success with these beauties will depend on your ability to make them feel at home. At least five hours of direct sunlight a day is necessary for the colorful blossoms and bracts that make bougainvilleas vibrant standouts, and warm temperatures and excellent drainage are a must. Heat lovers, they can handle temperatures over 100 degrees, but do not like temperatures below 60 degrees. (USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 9-11) Vines that are damaged by cold or frost in our area can usually be cut back and will regrow when the weather warms.
Grown primarily for their brilliantly colored carpals, a close look reveals the actual flowers of bougainvilleas are small, insignificant and usually white or cream colored. But each flower is surrounded by several sets of papery carpals in colors so brilliant, they can be seen for miles.
Colors range from deep purple, magenta, cerise, pinks, reds, yellows and whites.
They can be grown in the ground, or in pots or baskets: enjoy them in the summer months, and bring them in when it gets too cold.
Bougainvillea are drought tolerant once they are established. They do not like wet feet, so if you plant them outside, higher ground is best. Drainage is important whether you plant them in the ground or in a pot. If you plant in a pot, do not use a saucer or water dish. Too much water or waterlogged roots can cause bracts to drop, or your plant to stop blooming completely.
Bougainvillea in pots and baskets do very well, provided they get enough light. They also do better with constrained and crowded roots, so do not be in a hurry to repot.
Bougainvilleas grow best in quick draining, loamy soil that is equal parts clay, sand and silt, and amended with compost or organic matter to allow oxygen and nutrients to easily reach the fragile roots. Do not use any water retention types of mixes or ingredients. The excess water can cause root rot and leaf spots to appear.
Water only when the surface soil has dried, or the plant is slightly wilting. Then water deeply.
Avoid frequent, light watering; it promotes a weak root system and weakens the color of your plant.
The blooming cycle for bougainvillea is typically four to six weeks. Since bougainvillea blossoms only on new growth, pruning and pinching are important techniques to promote abundant growth and flowering.
Pruning can be done at any time of the year, and is used to shape the plant. Bougainvillea can be pruned hard to restrict growth, and stems can be pruned to create branching. Shaping your plant depends on if you want it to grow aggressively for a hedge, vertically to cover a trellis, or want it to be full, bushy and overflowing for a pot or hanging basket.
Pinching is important. Pinching is the method of removing the soft, growing tips of young plant stems to encourage fuller growth. The more you pinch, the more your bougainvillea will branch and bloom, so prune and pinch after a flowering cycle has completed.
For great color and abundant blossoms, feed your plant. Bougainvilleas are heavy feeders, but have delicate root systems. Specialized fertilizers for bougainvillea are available, and one of their distinguising factors is the inclusion of iron and other micronutrients. Read your fertilizer label and follow the directions. Applications will be more frequent during the flowering months, and should be cut to half during the non flowering months, especially when temperatures are cool.
Bougainvillea should come with warning signs. Long, sharp thorns can tear clothes and puncture skin, and often cause dermatitis or small infections for many gardeners and passerbys who are allergic to the thorns. One source I read suggested planting them 3 feet away from paths or patios, and to avoid planting them near swimming pools, play area or other areas of the garden people may be more likely to be scraped or scratched.
While the leaves of bougainvillea are not toxic, the sap of the plant is mildly toxic and a prick from the thorns can result in itching, swelling, burning, blisters or sores. Of course, this can also be used to your advantage. Bougainvilleas are aggressive growers and can be easily shaped into massive hedges. Many homes with yearlong warm temperatures plant bougainvillea as an effective and colorful security fence.
UC Master Gardeners of Napa County is recruiting for the Class of 2015! Applications are available at two information meetings:
Friday July 11, 12.30-2.00
Tuesday July 22, 6-7.30
At 1710 Soscol Ave., Suite 4, Napa, CA 94559.
Master Gardeners are volunteers who help the University of California reach the gardening public with home gardening information. Napa County Master Gardeners ( HYPERLINK "http://ucanr.org/ucmgnapa/" http://ucanr.org/ucmgnapa/) are available to answer gardening questions in person or by phone, Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 9 a.m. to Noon, at the U. C. Cooperative Extension office, 1710 Soscol Avenue, Suite 4, Napa, 707-253-4143, or from outside City of Napa toll-free at 877-279-3065. Or e-mail your garden questions by following the guidelines on our web site. Click on Napa, then on Have Garden Questions? Find us on Facebook under UC Master Gardeners of Napa County.
Napa County Master Gardeners welcome the public to visit their demonstration garden at Connolly Ranch on Thursdays, from 10:00 a.m. until noon, except the last Thursday of the month. Connolly Ranch is at 3141 Browns Valley Road at Thompson Avenue in Napa. Enter on Thompson Avenue.
- Author: Trisha Rose
Bougainvillea, a genus native to South America has found a home in many, many gardens.. “Discovered” by a French naturalist Dr. Philibert Commercon in 1768, he named the plant after his friend and ship’s admiral Louis-Antoinede Bougainville who sailed around the world between 1766 and 1768 with Dr. Commercon on board. By the early 1800’s two species were introduced to Europe while Kew Gardens distributed their propagated specimens to the British Colonies throughout the world.
The many species are relatively pest and disease free but are sensitive to frost and if they survive will behave as deciduous shrubs, dropping their leaves in the winter with new leaves emerging in the spring. As this shrub/vine is an exotic beauty, it isn’t the most hardy choice for all of Solano County. It does very well in Sunset zone 17 (most of Vallejo and Benicia) and can be a good “container on wheels “ choice for Fairfield, Davis and Dixon’s zone 14. In zone 9, Vacaville, it would take a lot of effort to protect this shrub from the frequent winter frosts and cold. If you can manage to give this shrub the environment it needs, you will be grandly rewarded with an exuberant mass of color. Although the true flowers are tiny, they are surrounded by intensely colorful bracts in red, purple, and magenta. Other milder colors are available, but for the most part I see only the intensely colorful species in our environs.
So now to my dilemma, I have had too much of a good thing. I inherited a number of well established bougainvilleas (aka bougies) when I moved into my home in Glen Cove. Two of the shrub/vines dominate the front garden. One has climbed up the garage wall and onto the roof below the 2nd story. Another is near the property line on the other side of the garage. The wall climber has required quite vigorous pruning (hacking) every year just to keep it in bounds. The 2nd grows so lushly it topples over once we get a good rain storm. I prop it back up and its none the worse for wear, except that it will fall over again and again until the rain’/wind storm subside in the spring.
Our son has been providing the big ladder pruning help each year until he moved out of the area. Don’t think this was an incentive to leave, at least hope not. So my husband and I have climbed up the big ladder and hacked at the long canes trying to corral them each year. Enough, late this past fall, we got out the loppers and cut the whole shrub down to about five feet tall. As spring has progressed we have been thinking what should we do with this shrub. We love the color but the maintenance is just too much. So , I had an ah ha moment. Let’s do an espalier and keep it to a height I can easily reach with my pruners. Of course, we are giving up the big drama, but we are also avoiding the “waiting to happen” problems the use of really big ladders invite.
Also, we decided to bungee cord the other bougie and attach it to an eye-hook a couple of years ago. This has worked wonders, no more falling bougie!
- Author: Betsy Buxton
Were you one of the smart gardeners who signed up to work with Ken Williams on the Vallejo Garden Tour? You weren’t – you didn’t? Boy, did you miss a great time touring through the selected gardens!
Lanie (newbie) and I (oldbe) were assigned a garden on Fern Place. Since this short street is right off Tennessee St near downtown, I figured that my directions were wrong; surely I didn’t err in following MapQuest! Nope, I correctly read the map, but what a difference 1 block off a main drag can make!
As I slowly went down the street, “casing the joint” so to speak, I began to forget the traffic noises and began to relax, enjoying the landscaping as I passed? Is this the place? NO!! Can this be the one?? NO!! Finally toward the street end, I saw the banana tree (Ensete ventricsum) with its deep red leafstalk and red-tinged leaves. I was there! Getting out of the car, I could barely wait to see what else was growing here!
Oh no, nobody answered the door! Was it the right day and wrong time or the wrong day and the right time? I squared my shoulders and walked down the driveway past the roses, past the gladiolas, and closer to the garage. There were pots of cacti, succulents, and other goodies that confirmed that no car ever went this-away!
There was my host, Mario, and his “helper” watering and weeding in honor of our visit. Apparently he figured that we would criticize if it weren’t “perfect”! With all the grassy weeds in my yard, I don’t point fingers at any one!
What a yard! The most gorgous exotic shade garden I have ever seen! There were pots (big ones) full of cannas; those wonderful striped leaf ones (the ‘Tiger’ series); ferns galore in even larger pots; Brugmasia, both in pots and in the ground; an enormous Philodendron bipinnatifidum with the deeply cut leaves at least 3 feet long and as wide at the stem!
All of this was growing in the shade of an Acacia tree, which was very well behaved – no suckering from the roots. Three water features, one with small koi swimming around in the basin, kept the noise from the side houses and the rear neighbor at bay.
I couldn’t understand why visitors kept mentioning how warm it was; my feet thawed out around 1pm! Looking from the shelter of the tree, I noticed just how sunny both neighbors’ yards were; I was comfy!
Leaving through the garden gate with its arch of grape vines (in barrels), the visitor was then amongst Mario’s collection of sun plants, including a Bougainvillea ‘Barbara Karst’, and then back down the driveway past the roses and to the street.
Having a river rock ground cover with both many large stepping stones and small intimate seating areas made the garden seem very large; of course, the large mirror pieces reflecting key pieces of garden statues and featured plants helped also!
Except for the large tree, this is a young garden! Mario and his life-partner, Calvin, told us that there was nothing in that back yard seven years ago when they moved in! All the work and all the planning was done by the two fellows with help from their large circle of friends! As I told them: “ya done good!”
PS: Mario asked me for a possible plant list to add to the already exotic look! I ended up trading him 2 Cymbidiums for 2 small Canna rhizomes! He thinks he got the better side of the trade. Boy, he doesn’t know!
On June 1, the entire group of volunteers goes on a “field trip” on all the gardens on the tour! I can’t wait!
PPS: Thanks to Ken Williams who coordinated this tour!
Do you have a fence, wall or ugly shed that you would love to hide? Look for solutions at your local nursery.
When I moved into my home many years ago, the builder provided only a back fence. We had to build side fences and gates and use some imagination when it came to landscaping. I was particularly interested in finding climbers that would cover some of the fences and soften those stark white walls.
I started with star jasmine (Trachelospermum jasminoides) because it was popular at the time. This plant is an easy climber for beginners as it will grow in either sun or shade and will almost support itself. Its white blossoms are fragrant and will attract bees so don’t plant it too close to a door.
I was so pleased that the star jasmine did well that I decided to try another jasmine, this one with a pinkish bud that blossoms into a dainty white flower. Poet's jasmine (Jasminum officinale) is not as sturdy as the star jasmine but is equally fragrant and very pretty.
Now that I had taken care of walls it was time to start on the fences. My neighbor was kind enough to cover one of the side fences with a violet trumpet vine (Clytostoma callistegioides).
This climber has given both my neighbor and me a lot of pleasure. It is a durable, drought-tolerant vine with prolific flowers that last from spring to late fall. My neighbor’s plant now covers the entire side fence, which is about 10 feet long. Trumpet vine will continue to spread if allowed but can be pruned in late winter by removing any long runners. I look forward to those lavender flowers every summer.
Climbing roses are another option for a fence cover. I have three different roses growing against a back fence. I chose 'Climbing Iceberg,' a hardy white rose that flowers prolifically; ‘Clair Matin,’ a pink climber; and another pink rose called 'Rennae' that grows well in the shade and has no thorns. There are many climbing roses. The pink ‘Cecile Brunner’ can spectacularly cover an arbor or a wire fence.
Another thornless rose is ‘Lady Banks,’ which can be seen all over Napa Valley in early spring. It is a particularly vigorous plant, its small yellow or white flowers sometimes seen high in trees. Unfortunately, it flowers only once a year.
All climbers need sturdy support. I have found that wire works better than wood in a trellis. If you are planning a wood arbor, use 4 x 6 or 6 x 6 posts at least 10 feet high to allow the vines to grow up and over for the best effect.
Now that my walls and fences have been softened by plants, I have turned to my chimney. Creeping fig (Ficus pumila) is one of California's better choices for covering brick. The one I planted last year has reached halfway up the chimney and is spreading sideways, too. I have great hopes that it will do its job and cover the whole chimney.
Others climbers can be spectacular in a suitable situation. Wisteria, with its lovely hanging purple or white chains of blossoms, can be overwhelming and needs a large arbor. Passion vine is aggressive and can spread 20 to 30 feet in a season. A grape vine can be successful but needs a careful annual pruning. Bougainvillea is spectacular but susceptible to frost and not suited to Napa Valley unless well protected. Even then, a cold winter may kill it.
I encourage you to experiment with climbing plants as I did. Perhaps try a potato vine with its prolific white flowers; a bower vine, with pink trumpet-shaped blossoms; or scarlet runner bean (Phaseolus coccineus) with its scarlet flowers followed by flat edible bean pods. Everyone loves the sweet pea (Lathyrus odoratus), a vine that likes warm days and cool nights and fills the air with perfume. The choices are many and just waiting for you to plant them.
Workshop: Napa County Master Gardeners will conduct a workshop on “Container Gardening” on Saturday, May 18, from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., at the University of California Cooperative Extension office (address below). Learn to grow mobile gardens that take advantage of the best sites in your yard or home. Discover the best containers, soils and locations for your plants to prosper. Online registration (credit card only) Mail in registration (cash or check only)
Master Gardeners are volunteers who help the University of California reach the gardening public with home gardening information. Napa County Master Gardeners (http://ucanr.org/ucmgnapa) are available to answer gardening questions in person or by phone, Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 9 a.m. to Noon, at the U. C. Cooperative Extension office, 1710 Soscol Avenue, Suite 4, Napa, 707-253-4143, or from outside City of Napa toll-free at 877-279-3065. Or e-mail your garden questions by following the guidelines on our web site. Click on Napa, then on Have Garden Questions?