
Campsis × tagliabueana 'Golden Trumpet'
20,70 €
Livré chez vous par Jardiplants, un service Renoday.
Description
Campsis × tagliabueana 'Golden Trumpet': late-season colour on a manageable climber Campsis × tagliabueana 'Golden Trumpet' brings the trumpet-vine look in a form that fits more gardens than many older selections. It is a deciduous, woody climber with compound leaves and clustered, tubular flowers in shades of orange and yellow. When it is happy, it builds a tidy framework and then layers new flowering growth over the top from mid-summer into autumn. This is a wall-and-support plant: it climbs by aerial rootlets, gripping rough surfaces and trained wires. The most reliable flowering comes from warmth and sun that help the stems ripen, so a sheltered, south- or west-facing position pays off. Expect a plant that improves with time as the permanent framework thickens and the annual flowering growth becomes more abundant. Habit, structure, and what “2.5-4 m” looks like in practice In open ground, 'Golden Trumpet' typically reaches 2.5-4 m in height and can spread 2.5-4 m across a wall or pergola once established. Growth is made up of a long-lived woody skeleton plus fresh extension shoots each season. The leaves are pinnate (made up of multiple leaflets) and create a dense summer screen that drops in autumn. A young plant often spends its first season settling roots and finding its direction. After that, shoots lengthen more confidently, especially where the base stays cool and evenly moist and the top growth sits in sun. Give it enough horizontal space to fan out and it will flower along the current season’s shoots, with clusters forming along the length as well as at the top. Light, warmth, and choosing the right wall Full sun is the simplest route to strong flowering. A warm wall also protects buds and new growth from cold winds and helps the plant ripen wood before winter. If you are planting in a more open site, place the root zone where it stays reasonably cool and moisture-retentive, then guide growth upward into the sun. Best aspect: South- or west-facing for heat and light Exposure: Sheltered positions help performance and reduce stem dieback risk Neighbouring plants: Leave airflow around the foliage so it dries quickly after rain Soil and watering: steady moisture with free drainage 'Golden Trumpet' is adaptable to most garden soils (chalk, clay, loam, or sand) as long as they drain well. It appreciates moisture through the growing season, especially while establishing, but it also benefits from air in the root zone. Improving heavy ground with grit and organic matter creates the combination it likes: moisture held in the soil body, with water moving through and air staying around the roots. During dry spells, water deeply so moisture reaches the full depth of the rootball and the surrounding soil. A mulch of compost or fine bark keeps the root run cooler and reduces peaks and troughs in moisture. Once established, the plant becomes more tolerant of short dry periods, yet it still performs best when the soil never swings to extremes. Support, training, and tying-in for a clean outline This climber becomes heavy as it matures, so the support needs to match the long-term load. For walls, use a set of horizontal wires fixed with vine eyes or wall anchors; for pergolas, plan for thickening stems and allow room for maintenance access. First year: Choose 2-4 main stems and tie them in loosely, spacing them out across the support Ongoing: Guide long shoots to fill gaps and keep growth distributed evenly across the support Surface note: Aerial rootlets grip rough texture and wired supports particularly well If you prefer a clear framework with flowers at eye level, train stems sideways along wires, then let short flowering shoots rise from those laterals. That approach also makes pruning straightforward. Pruning rhythm: shaping and flowering in the same move Campsis flowers on new growth, so pruning in early spring sets up the season. Start by removing winter-damaged tips and any stems that are crowding the centre. Then shorten the previous year’s side shoots to a few buds, keeping the main framework in place. The plant responds by pushing fresh extension growth that carries flower clusters later in the summer. In summer, you can also lightly tip-prune overly long, whippy shoots to keep the outline close to the wall and encourage branching. Keep cuts clean and purposeful, and always preserve the main structural stems you have trained into place. Feeding and mulch A modest approach works well: a spring mulch of compost and a balanced feed at the start of growth is usually enough. On very lean soils or in containers, a second light feed in early summer supports sustained flowering. Focus on consistent water and warm light first; those two factors do most of the work. Containers: smaller, slower growth with higher consistency demands In a pot, growth stays smaller and slower than in open ground, which can make 'Golden Trumpet' easier to keep within a set footprint. Choose a heavy container that won’t topple, use a free-draining mix with a moisture-holding component, and add a robust obelisk or wall-fixed frame for the shoots to climb. Watering becomes the main job in summer, as a flowering climber in sun uses a surprising amount of moisture. Over winter, protect the root ball from deep freezing with insulation around the pot and placement in a sheltered spot. A bright wall or courtyard corner often provides enough extra warmth for this cultivar’s H4 hardiness level, particularly when the roots stay protected. Common snags and quick fixes Few flowers: Increase sun exposure and prune in early spring so new flowering shoots form strongly Leggy growth: Train stems sideways and shorten laterals in spring to create more flowering points Dry stress: Deep watering and a mulch stabilise moisture, especially in the first two years Winter tip dieback: Cut back to sound wood in spring and keep the plant sheltered If you want a trumpet vine with a bright, late-summer show and a size that can be planned around, Campsis × tagliabueana 'Golden Trumpet' is a strong fit for warm walls, pergolas, and large containers.
