Oh Ms Mandevilla, enchanté. Thy wit, charm and insight hath bewitched me. I offer you my humble subscription as a token of my appreciation, praying that our paths may chance upon each other once more. Fare thee well, with admiration. Thy faithful newly subscriber.
I have seen many different people making video's about plants, but i like your's the most! Greetings from Belgium! And one other thing i need to say, you are funny and i like you and the way you talk about our leafy friends. Very usefull 2!
At the garden center I work at, they were getting rid of two mounding-type mandevillas as the warm weather is ending. It occurred to me after watching this video that I should turn them into house plants. Thanks for the inspiration!
Ok you are liking the same plants as me 😁 very happy I subscribed! I currently have one living in my grow tent after deciding I was not wanting to buy them every year. Didn't know I could grow as a house plant. After cutting back I thought it would just grow slowly over the winter but nooooo there is a jungle of vines in the tent 🤪 I keep cutting them back.
Love the information packed videos which are also very entertaining. Also love the fact that you are also based in Canada. Question - I bought dipladenias this year and they are potted... will they survive our winter and if so can I plant them in the ground ? I'm in Zone 5
Hi Terence Thank you, glad you are enjoying the videos. Definitely don’t plant them in the ground! They are tropicals, I believe they can only overwinter in at least Zone 10. If they are still in pots and you can trim them from their climbing structure, I highly recommend overwintering them like I did with my little dipladenia in the video. Do you have a window in your home with bright light? That would be the place to overwinter them
They say Dipladenia grows to like 12 feet while Mandevilla reaches 20 feet. I am growing the Dipladenia for the first time... I live in Florida, zone 9a so they should do well. Do I cut them back in the winter or are they annuals?
Hi. In your growing zone they should be a perennial. It’s not necessary to cut it back unless it’s super old in my opinion ( if it’s been growing for years I mean). I would leave it alone if it’s relatively new. You can prune the side stems and leaves if desired but you don’t have to!
Hi, yes you can. You have to prune it of course since it’ll be bound to your trellis or whatever you used to train it. I do recommend a spot indoors with full sun , depending on your location, you might need a grow light to supplement through the winter , and in dry climates they are prone to spider mites .
You need to say where you're from or at least your USDA garden zone, what grows in full sun for you may be too much somewhere else. Just a recommendation.
You’re right I do! I often do in my videos but I must have missed it in this one. I’m in zone 3, alberta Canada. What zone are you in?? Have you grown mandevillas ?
@@plantspeak7117 your video just popped up on a youtube search for mandevillas and I had just bought one so hadn't seen you before. I'm in subtropical Mexico! 🤣😄😂... and even being ignorant about this particular plant I know if I put it out in my sun all day it would fry to a crisp! When I see them here, they're usually ok with morning sun but I've never seen them on a wall all day and never where there is afternoon sun. Perhaps if you just put your zone in all the copy info below your video? Cheers 🙂
Oh Ms Mandevilla, enchanté. Thy wit, charm and insight hath bewitched me. I offer you my humble subscription as a token of my appreciation, praying that our paths may chance upon each other once more. Fare thee well, with admiration. Thy faithful newly subscriber.
I have seen many different people making video's about plants, but i like your's the most! Greetings from Belgium! And one other thing i need to say, you are funny and i like you and the way you talk about our leafy friends. Very usefull 2!
Haha thank you Steve.
Thanks for watching my videos!
@@plantspeak7117 You're welcome, thank YOU for making them.
At the garden center I work at, they were getting rid of two mounding-type mandevillas as the warm weather is ending. It occurred to me after watching this video that I should turn them into house plants. Thanks for the inspiration!
Awesome !!!! They are so lovely indoors. Just watch for spider mites if you live in a dry area. Keeping the area moist would help !
@@plantspeak7117 I'll keep that in mind. They love my lemon trees but at least they disappear when I put them outside in the spring.
Ok you are liking the same plants as me 😁 very happy I subscribed! I currently have one living in my grow tent after deciding I was not wanting to buy them every year. Didn't know I could grow as a house plant. After cutting back I thought it would just grow slowly over the winter but nooooo there is a jungle of vines in the tent 🤪 I keep cutting them back.
Thank-you for the advice about keeping it in a pot !
You Looks Soo Pretty 👍👍
How lovelyyyyyy youre my new friend beautiful girlllll
Muito bom e instrutivo seu vídeo
A mo dipladenia,parabens pelo canal😘
Hi lovely guys and congratulation sis for you
Love the information packed videos which are also very entertaining. Also love the fact that you are also based in Canada. Question - I bought dipladenias this year and they are potted... will they survive our winter and if so can I plant them in the ground ? I'm in Zone 5
Hi Terence
Thank you, glad you are enjoying the videos.
Definitely don’t plant them in the ground! They are tropicals, I believe they can only overwinter in at least Zone 10.
If they are still in pots and you can trim them from their climbing structure, I highly recommend overwintering them like I did with my little dipladenia in the video.
Do you have a window in your home with bright light? That would be the place to overwinter them
Thanks. Good to know that I won't to lose these drive.google.com/file/d/1kLXZUQIFXwxptOPZrS3XJi6hKyxY53vk/view?usp=sharing
They say Dipladenia grows to like 12 feet while Mandevilla reaches 20 feet. I am growing the Dipladenia for the first time... I live in Florida, zone 9a so they should do well. Do I cut them back in the winter or are they annuals?
Hi.
In your growing zone they should be a perennial.
It’s not necessary to cut it back unless it’s super old in my opinion ( if it’s been growing for years I mean).
I would leave it alone if it’s relatively new. You can prune the side stems and leaves if desired but you don’t have to!
@@plantspeak7117 thanks 😊
Mandevi-ya!
Can you bring the plant in at the end of the season?
Hi, yes you can.
You have to prune it of course since it’ll be bound to your trellis or whatever you used to train it.
I do recommend a spot indoors with full sun , depending on your location, you might need a grow light to supplement through the winter , and in dry climates they are prone to spider mites .
You need to say where you're from or at least your USDA garden zone, what grows in full sun for you may be too much somewhere else. Just a recommendation.
You’re right I do!
I often do in my videos but I must have missed it in this one.
I’m in zone 3, alberta Canada.
What zone are you in?? Have you grown mandevillas ?
@@plantspeak7117 your video just popped up on a youtube search for mandevillas and I had just bought one so hadn't seen you before.
I'm in subtropical Mexico! 🤣😄😂... and even being ignorant about this particular plant I know if I put it out in my sun all day it would fry to a crisp! When I see them here, they're usually ok with morning sun but I've never seen them on a wall all day and never where there is afternoon sun.
Perhaps if you just put your zone in all the copy info below your video?
Cheers 🙂
I'm in zone 4. South Dakota. I have a mandovina outside that's beautiful. I would like to bring it inside for the winter but, I'm afraid it will die😢
@@dorothybahmuller44 ruclips.net/video/NobEwwBEmuw/видео.html
Good luck! 🙂
I have a big pot, can i cut it in half
Hi!
What do you mean in half ?
Like chop the top half off? Or cut the actual pot in half with the plant inside ?
@@plantspeak7117 i will send a picture when get hpme, but cutting the plant in two
How can i add a picture here
@@user-ws8ie8gx6n I’m not sure how to do that with RUclips .😕
@@plantspeak7117 ok, well can you cut the plant in half
Omg I need to make better life choices!😅
I don't think the one I have is a climbing it doesn't seem to vine out
Hi there .
How long have you had it ? How much sun does it get , and how big is it ?
You have the diplanda they are mounding ones good for hanging baskets, the Mandevilles have tendrils and will climb trellis.