Vines

10 products

Turn a bare fence, trellis, or arbor into a living wall of color, fragrance, and shade — vines deliver the most beauty per square foot of any plant you can grow.

Guarantee
30-day plant guarantee
Shipping
USPS & FedEx · all 48 states
Sourcing
Partner nurseries nationwide
Based in
York, SC
10 products

About Vines

Vines work vertically, so they give back more than they take. A single plant can clothe an arbor, soften a fence, frame a doorway, or screen an unwanted view — all from a footprint barely wider than a flowerpot. Some bloom in waves of color, some perfume a whole patio, some turn fiery in fall, and a few hand you fruit. What they share is ambition: give them something to climb and they reward you fast.

What's in this collection

There's a vine for every job. Want season-long flowers? Reach for clematis, mandevilla, or bougainvillea. Chasing fragrance? Jasmine and honeysuckle carry scent across a yard, and a wisteria in full cascade is unforgettable. Need a fast, dependable cover for a fence or pergola? Trumpet vine and climbing hydrangea fill in quickly. Knowing how a vine climbs helps you match it to your support — twiners and tendril-climbers need wires or lattice to wrap, while clingers grip masonry on their own.

Most vines ask for very little. Plant in well-drained soil, give the roots a steady drink while they establish, and offer a sturdy structure from day one. Most flower best in full to part sun, and a light prune after bloom keeps them shapely and encourages the next flush. Match the vine's mature vigor to your space — a few are enthusiastic growers best given room to run.

Shipped to arrive ready to climb. Every vine is grown in our nursery network, inspected, and hand-packed in protective, season-aware packaging so it reaches you healthy and rooted for a strong start — and we honor the state-by-state agricultural rules that govern where certain plants can ship.

Common questions

  • How fast do climbing vines grow?

    It depends on the type. Vigorous vines like trumpet vine, wisteria, and honeysuckle can cover a fence or arbor in a season or two, while clematis and climbing hydrangea take a year or so to settle in before they take off. Most spend their first year building roots, then accelerate.

  • What kind of support do vines need?

    Match the support to how the vine climbs. Twiners and tendril-climbers (clematis, jasmine, mandevilla) need a trellis, wires, or lattice to wrap around. Clinging vines like climbing hydrangea grip masonry and wood on their own. Set up a sturdy structure at planting time so the vine has something to grab from the start.

  • Do vines damage fences, walls, or structures?

    Most well-chosen vines on a trellis or wire are gentle and easy to manage. Self-clinging types can hold tightly to surfaces, so give them solid masonry rather than wood siding or painted walls, and keep heavy growers like wisteria off gutters and lightweight fencing. A yearly prune keeps any vine in bounds.

  • Will vines come back every year?

    Many do. Perennial and woody vines such as clematis, climbing hydrangea, trumpet vine, and wisteria return and grow larger each season in their hardiness range. A few tender favorites like mandevilla and bougainvillea are grown as annuals in cold climates or overwintered indoors. Check each variety's zones before planting.

  • Can vines ship to my state?

    Some plants carry agricultural shipping restrictions that vary by state. Those rules are built into fulfillment, so your vine is only sent where it's allowed to go.

Still have questions?Call (803) 610-1386or email info@livegoodlogistics.com