Clematis crispa

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Plant Characteristics
Origin: ?
Cultivation
Exposure: ?"?" is not in the list (sun, part-sun, shade, unknown) of allowed values for the "Exposure" property.
Water: ?"?" is not in the list (wet, moist, moderate, dry, less when dormant) of allowed values for the "Water" property.
Scientific Names



Read about Clematis crispa in the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture 

Clematis crispa, Linn. A slender climber, reaching 3-4 ft.: lvs. very thin; lfts. 3-5 or more, variable in outline and sometimes undivided, often 3-5-lobed: fls. purple, varying to whitish, cylindrical or bell-shaped, 1-2 in. long; points of sepals recurved; styles of fr. hairy but not plumose. June-Sept. Va. to Texas. B.R. 32:60. B.M. 1892. I.H.2:78 (as C. campaniflora). G. 30:503: 34:147. V. 6:379. Lav. 14.—This and the allied species are fragrant. A hybrid of this species is C. cylindrica, Sims (x C. integrifolia). See No. 1. A number of hybrid forms, the offspring of a cross between this species and C. texensis are figured and described in M.D.G. 1898:500 and one as "blue bells" in Gn. 49, p. 189. CH

Below is a synonym of C. Crispa (per USDA):

Clematis Simsii, Sweet (C. Pitcheri, Torr. & Gray). High climbing: branchlets pubescent: lvs. of 3-4 pairs of lfts. and a terminal 1ft. reduced almost to a midrib; lfts. coarsely reticulated, lobed or 3-parted, usually mucronate: fls. 1 in. long and ¾ in. diam., with swollen base; sepals dull purple, recurved at the tips: achenes pubescent, styles not plumose. June-Aug. S. Ind. to Mo., southward to Mex. Lav. 15. B.M. 1816 (as C. cordata). Var. Sargentii, Rehd. (C. Sargentii, Lav.). Fls. smaller, paler: lfts. rarely lobed. Lav. 18.—A hybrid of this species with C. texensis is figured in R.H. 1833:376.CH


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