Needed sugestions for climbing edible plant

smom1976

Garden Ornament
Joined
Jun 12, 2008
Messages
341
Reaction score
1
Points
94
Location
pensacola Fl zone 8b/9
Ok so here is the scoop..

I have a pergula.. both of the "sides" were planted last year with confederate jasmine.. one side flurished the other not so..

I have one side with just a plain bare spot.

I would like to plant something that will climb and that I could eat..

I have thought of grapes.. but I live in zone 8 and zone 9 depending on the map.. one map even said 8b

we are divided by interstate 10 south is one zone and north is another and I-10 is about 5-8 miles from my house.

sooo with that said.. I was told that grapes could not grow south of I-10

does anyone know of a berry or fruit that will grow? Maybe black berry or raspberry?
 

Sylvie

Garden Ornament
Joined
Jul 18, 2008
Messages
163
Reaction score
0
Points
79
Location
NE Ohio
Raspberries and blackberries are bushes not really climbers but you could tie off longer blackberry canes to the pergola. You can espalier apples and I don't see why running them up, over, into the pergola wouldn't work on the south side anyhow.
Have you looked into Scarlet Runner Beans or Hyacinth Bean? Both edible and lovely flowers.
 

kellygirrl

Chillin' In The Garden
Joined
Jan 31, 2009
Messages
76
Reaction score
0
Points
29
Location
Fairfield, IA
I think fuzzy kiwis need a pollinator like my northern hardies; you might not have that room. Anyway, I've found my argutas to require too much attention to keep in a small space, but then it seems the same with grapes.

Thornless triple crown raspberries are hardy to your zone. They're compared to and grown like Doyles, which I have, but less expensive I think. They are sweeter, but less productive, than mine (which can be extremely productive), I read. My Doyles are sour unless I get them just exactly right and if you wait a little too long it's too late; some people suggest them more for jams. They could get 30 feet long, but easy to prune. They're not self climbing.

While you're waiting, some climbing beans have pretty red flowers, or maybe an edible gourd:cool:
 

smom1976

Garden Ornament
Joined
Jun 12, 2008
Messages
341
Reaction score
1
Points
94
Location
pensacola Fl zone 8b/9
I havent really "looked" into anything so to say.. I did just look at kiwi fruit. sounds wonderful. But the planting space is a box 1.5 feet by 8 feet.. they were talking about spreading one plant 20 feet?? I would need two a male and a female? could I still do this?

:throw keep the ideas comming... :coolsun
 

me&thegals

Garden Ornament
Joined
Jul 14, 2008
Messages
451
Reaction score
4
Points
93
Location
WI-zone 4
How about Red Malabar spinach? It has a pretty maroonish stem, lots of large, thick, shiny leaves, and it climbs. Thrives in heat. Edible. Not actually spinach but can be used just like it.
 

patandchickens

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Nov 23, 2007
Messages
2,537
Reaction score
2
Points
153
Location
Ontario, Canada
I'm not sure scarlet runner beans would set fruit reliably in your climate (?).

What about one of the edible passionflower varieties?

Pat
 

kellygirrl

Chillin' In The Garden
Joined
Jan 31, 2009
Messages
76
Reaction score
0
Points
29
Location
Fairfield, IA
smom1976 said:
But the planting space is a box 1.5 feet by 8 feet.. they were talking about spreading one plant 20 feet?? I would need two a male and a female? could I still do this?
The spread is more above ground, though I have to remind my plants about that during summer :rolleyes: If your pergola is 8 feet wide, you could do it with a kiwi, especially if you found a self fertile one for your zone. They are less aggressive usually, too.

Couldn't resist a quick check. Here's a gardenweb conversation clip:

"RE: Self-fertile Purple Kiwi

* Posted by kiwinut 6b TN (My Page) on
Mon, Sep 29, 08 at 17:03

There are self-fertile kiwi, just not whole species that are self-fertile. Breeders in New Zealand found a self-fertile fuzzy kiwi a few years ago in a batch of 'Hayward' seedlings, and have used it to breed a large number of self-fertile kiwis, although none have been good enough to release so far. These do turn up very rarely, and some day, most cultivated kiwis may be self-fertile. Keep in mind that all wild grapes are also dioecious, with only male and female vines, but nearly all modern cultivars are now self-fertile."


Wink to Sylvie for suggesting climbing beans same time as me;)
 

Latest posts

Top