Pretty in Pink: 7 Stunning Climber Plants with Pink Flowers
Adding a pop of pink color to your garden landscape is easy with climber plants boasting beautiful pink blooms From brightly colored bougainvillea to romantic climbing roses, pink-flowering vines infuse charm, vibrancy, and visual interest to gardens
Climbers with pink blossoms are perfect for decorating garden structures like trellises, arbors, pergolas, fences, and walls. Trailing over edges or spilling from hanging baskets and containers, pink climbing plants also make excellent groundcovers.
If you’re looking to add a pink floral display to your outdoor space, here are seven of the best climber plants with pink flowers:
- Pink Bougainvillea
With their vibrant pink-purple bracts bougainvillea vines provide year-round color to warm climates. Growing up to 20 feet tall these thorny climbers bloom off and on all year with colorful flower-like bracts surrounding tiny white blooms. Varieties like ‘Barbara Karst’ and ‘Pink Pixie’ have bright pink bracts that make stunning displays. Train bougainvillea over a trellis or archway. Its drought tolerance also makes it ideal for containers.
- Pink Mandevilla
Mandevilla produces trumpet-shaped pink blooms surrounded by glossy green leaves from spring until fall frost. These tropical climbers can grow 10-15 feet tall and thrive in full sun Mandevilla is perfect for training up trellises, walls, and fences. Its flowers attract hummingbirds and butterflies Overwinter indoors in colder climates.
- Pink Morning Glory
Morning glory is a fast-growing annual vine with lush green heart-shaped leaves and funnel-shaped pink flowers. Ipomoea cordatotriloba features vibrant deep pink blooms with white centers and dark throats. It can reach 15 feet tall. Morning glories grow well on trellises and arbors, quickly covering them in a blanket of pink. Hummingbirds love visiting the nectar-rich blooms.
- Pink Clematis
Clematis produce delicate starry flowers in soft pink shades. Popular varieties include ‘Pink Champagne’ with 8-inch rich pink blooms and ‘Mrs. Robert Brydon’ featuring pale pink flowers with a red center stripe. Clematis thrive in partial shade and bloom spring through fall. These vines can grow up to 20 feet tall. Clematis look beautiful trained up arbors, fences, and trellises.
- Climbing Roses
What’s more romantic than pink roses? Climbing rose varieties like ‘Blushing Bouquet’ and ‘Eden’ produce an abundance of soft pink blooms and fill the air with their sweet fragrance. Train climbing roses over an archway, fence, or obelisk. Other stunning pink climbers include ‘New Dawn’ and ‘Cecile Brunner’. Prune roses in late winter before new growth emerges.
- Spanish Jasmine
Also called Spanish jasmine, confederate jasmine produces fragrant clusters of tubular pink-red flowers that attract hummingbirds. These evergreen vines feature dark green leathery leaves that provide a nice contrast to the bright pink blooms. Confederate jasmine thrives in warm climates. It’s perfect for training up sunny walls and trellises.
- Fuchsia
Many fuchsia varieties are vigorous climbers smothered in dangling flowers. Fuchsia ‘Lady Boothby’ is a hardy variety with red and pink bi-colored blooms. Its columnar growth habit makes it perfect for climbing up trellises and fences. Fuchsia thrives in partial shade and attracts hummingbirds and butterflies. It blooms from summer until fall frost.
Pink climbing plants allow you to add vertical interest and pops of color to gardens and outdoor living spaces. Bougainvillea, mandevilla, morning glory, clematis, roses, jasmine, and fuchsia are just a few examples of stunning climbers that produce abundant pink blooms certain to draw admiration.
Consider your climate and growing conditions when selecting pink climbing plants for your landscape. Most vines need sturdy support structures like trellises, walls, fences, or arbors to climb up. Proper pruning and care will keep climbers looking their best. Incorporate climbers with pink flowers as focal points, for privacy, or as decorative accents on structures to enhance your garden’s beauty.
Perfect Colorful Vine for your Mailbox!
- Perfect pink color!
- Enjoy getting your mail everyday
- Easy to plant and maintain
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Soil Type | Adaptable |
Sunlight | Full |
Drought Tolerance | Good |
Mature Height | 6-10 Feet |
Mature Width | 6-10 Feet |
Growth Rate | fast |
Bloom Color | Pink |
Shipping Restriction | AZ |
Are you looking for a beautiful tropical plant that makes you feel like you’re on vacation every time you look at it? The Pink Mandevilla Vine is that plant. This is a woody vine that seems to enjoy the heat by sending out beautiful pink trumpet-shaped flowers along its woody, twining stem.
Mandevilla Vines grow well in hot climates and is known well for its vining abilities. Many people adorn their telephone poles and mailboxes with the showy trumpet shaped flowers.
Although, this beauty thrives in the hot sun, it also serves as a great house plant. They’re not too hard to take care of, and you can bring them inside when it gets cool. The pretty pink blossoms are characterized by their beautiful trumpet shape. With oval-shaped, evergreen leaves and blooms that are 4 inches across, the Mandevilla will catch people’s eyes.
The Pink Mandevilla does best in full sun and can handle a lot of different types of soil as long as it drains well. In order to make it look bushier, it can be pinched back or left as a vine. The Mandevilla must be brought indoors when winter rolls around due to its preference to warm temperatures.
Tropical plants can add warmth to anyone’s garden or home. Just looking at the Mandevilla plant’s pretty pink flowers will show how beautiful and classy it is. Fragrant blooms and sunny skies, the Mandevilla with promise an abundance of tropical beauty either indoors or outdoors.
Adorn your mailbox, front porch or simply a corner in your home with the Pink Mandevilla today.
Mandevilla can be grown outdoors in the ground in zones 9 to 11. In zone 9, they usually go dormant or almost dormant in the winter. In the tropics, on the other hand, they stay green all year. In cooler areas, mandevilla can be grown as an annual or in a pot that can be brought inside for the winter.
Mandevilla vines thrive in hot, sunny climates. Plant them in full sun for the most abundant blooms.
They are adaptable to any well-drained soil. Allow the soil to dry out between waterings. Mandevilla vines likely a lightly moist soil, but do not tolerate wet soil.
Prune your plant back anytime to control growth and promote a bushier habit.
Feed your mandevilla with a slow release fertilizer in spring. Pink Mandevilla Vine Care
Mandevilla can be grown outdoors in the ground in zones 9 to 11. In zone 9, they usually go dormant or almost dormant in the winter. In the tropics, on the other hand, they stay green all year. In cooler areas, mandevilla can be grown as an annual or in a pot that can be brought inside for the winter.
Mandevilla vines thrive in hot, sunny climates. Plant them in full sun for the most abundant blooms.
They are adaptable to any well-drained soil. Allow the soil to dry out between waterings. Mandevilla vines likely a lightly moist soil, but do not tolerate wet soil.
Prune your plant back anytime to control growth and promote a bushier habit.
Feed your mandevilla with a slow release fertilizer in spring.
When temperatures are getting close to 50 degrees F it is time to move your mandevilla plant inside.
Be sure your plant is free of pests. Some safe and easy options if you aren’t sure are neem oil and insecticidal soaps.
Cut your plant back by at least ⅓. If you have a very large plant go ahead and prune it back even more. These plants tolerate heavy pruning.
Place your mandevilla in a sunny spot.
There are times when you should water your plant less often than during the growing season, but you should still do it. Allow the plant to dry out completely before watering it.
*Do not fertilize in winter. Even in places where mandevillas are evergreen all year, they still go through a resting phase in the winter when they don’t flower and grow more slowly. So give your plant some much needed rest so it can explode with growth in spring.
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Eden: Climbing Rose
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