16 easy climbing plant ideas to elevate your planting

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Pink trellis with yellow climbing roses against garden fence

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It’s always fun finding new ways to get planting and adding colour and foliage to your garden. Easy climbing plant ideas allow you to cover even more areas and surfaces with the prettiest leaves and blooms around.

Climbers work with just about all garden landscaping ideas, both disguising less attractive areas and creating an intimate and romantic atmosphere. Plus, they’re a dream in smaller spaces since they don’t impact on your square footage.

‘Climbing plants are a great way to add another element to your garden ideas,’ says Chris Bonnett, founder of Gardening Express. ‘They have a magical charm and are perfect if you’re looking for some privacy.’

Easy climbing plant ideas

‘When you are planting your garden don’t forget the vertical spaces,’ advises garden designer Fiona Lamb. ‘Walls, fences, gates and garden shade ideas like pergolas all offer planting possibilities.’

‘Climbers can hide an ugly outbuilding or old fence, they can invite you through an arch or gate or add scent, colour and texture to a sitting area.’

1. Contrast blooms with a colourful trellis

Pink trellis with yellow climbing roses against garden fence

Image credit: Future PLC/Jamie Mason

‘Climbers don’t all just grow vertically themselves,’ points out Chris from Gardening Express. ‘So you’ll need to provide the plants with some support as they begin growing to help them get some grip. Using trellis is probably the most popular option. These can be put on a wall or fence and come in a lot of different sizes, so you’ll definitely be able to find one that fits a budget.

‘You can even install trellis to appear as if it is free-standing,’ continues Chris. ‘This allows you to section off parts of your garden and provide an illusion that it’s a little bigger than it may initially appear.’

Make your trellis work harder by integrating it into the look of your climber. Paint the structure in a bright colour, contrasting with the blooms on display. For a more subtle approach, choose a tonal shade to the flowers.

2. Grow fragrant sweetpeas

White sweetpeas growing on bamboo plant support

Image credit: Future PLC/Colin Poole

Sweet peas are a lovely addition to climbing plant ideas. The beautifully fragranced flower adds another dimension to your garden, and they’ll happily grow to around 2m high as long as they’re supported.

Plant a combination of colours of sweetpeas. Since cutting the blooms encourages more growth, you’ll be readily provided with a variety of colourful flowers for your vases.

3. Decorate the front of your home

Exterior of front of stone house with climbing plants

Image credit: Future PLC/Polly Eltes

Just as climbing plant ideas are great for disguising the less exciting parts of a garden, so they add interest and texture to the exterior of buildings and front garden ideas. Grow your climbers over the front of your home to ensure a colourful and fragranced welcome.

Ensure you regularly cut back so as not to block daylight from filtering through your windows or blocking any doors.

4. Train over an arch

Wooden garden arch covered with climbing plants

Image credit: Future PLC/Colin Poole

‘An arch is an instant focal point in your garden if you’re looking for one,’ says Chris from Gardening Express. ‘And they provide great structure for your plants to grow and vine through. Pergolas are another good way to section off different parts of your garden but do require more space.

A little guidance will encourage your climbers to grow over these structures to create easy garden ideas.

5. Use as a natural background

Garden with potted plants and climbing plants against wooden fence

Image credit: Future PLC

If you’ve worked hard and cultivating your outdoor space with pots and beds, it can be a bit jarring to have plain wooden garden fence ideas behind it all. Cover yours with evergreen climbing plant ideas to ensure a lush, green backdrop to the rest of your garden.

6. Use to create cohesion

Exterior of cream house with climbing plants and dining table under parasol

Image credit: Future PLC/Alicia Taylor

Use climbers to visually link different zones of the garden. Planting climbers on walls connected to separate zones will help create cohesion and a more set scheme.

You don’t even have to use the same varieties across the spaces – the look of the vertical planting is enough to connect them. Try using fragranced climbers in your relaxing/reading areas, and keep those which attract the most insect life away from dining areas.

7. Establish a living wall with climbers

Garden living wall by metal table and chair set

Image credit: Future PLC/Colin Poole

Create a captivating living wall by covering fences with climbing plants, of all varieties to add interest. This alternative approach to creating a living wall, using climbers rather than securing vertical planters to bed in pot plants, means an easier approach to covering fences and boundary walls.

Finish with a flower bed of grasses to spill onto the patio, to add to the freeform style of planting.

8. Create a foliage feature wall

Garden patio with wooden pergola and brick wall covered in plants

Image credit: Future PLC

Train a self-clinging plant, such as a climbing rose or a hardy Clematis, to grow up a trellis attached to an exterior brick wall to create a feature wall of sorts.

This garden trellis idea offers a far more dense coverage than trying to fill the space with potted plants alone.

9. Add colour and fragrance with rambling roses

Close up of climbing red roses

Image credit: Future PLC/Colin Poole

Roses are probably the most romantic of all the climbing plants, with a beautiful display of flowers that will stay in bloom for months at a time. Thanks to the many different varieties available you can introduce a number of colours, from lemon yellow and pastel pink to creamy white – there’s a shade to suit all garden landscape ideas.

As well as adding vibrant colour the right rose will fill your garden with fragrance too. Climbing roses grown over a pergola will create a surround of scent that will heighten the scenes every time you pass through.

10. Welcome colour to shaded spots

House exterior with climbing plant and outdoor table and bench set

Image credit: Future PLC

If you’re negotiating north-facing garden ideas, consider a climbing plant that will thrive in shady conditions. ‘Tolerating a more shady spot, Parthenocisus henryana will give you fabulous, vibrant autumn colour ‘ advises Fiona Lamb.

‘And in the most shady corners the climbing hydrangea Hydrangea anomala subsp. Petiolaris once it gets going will romp away happily.’

11. Enjoy the sweet scent of Jasmine

Close up of climbing white summer jasmine

Image credit: Future PLC

This pretty, dainty climber produces an abundance of sweet-scented white flowers from mid summer to autumn.

‘Evergreen stalwarts such as Trachelospermum jasminoides give you a dark green blanket of cover all year round and pretty white, sweetly scented flowers in summer add to its charm,’ Fiona Lamb explains. ‘It can be planted in sun or partial shade and in most soils so is a fantastic option for almost every garden.’

12. Welcome country style with wisteria

Wisteria climbing on brick wall

Image credit: Future PLC

This is a vigorous climber known for its beautiful cascades of perfumed purple flowers. The stems are twisted and wooded so will need to be supported by nails.

‘Wisteria is a hardy and fast-growing climber, often grown in spur-pruned tiers on a wall’ explains Chris from Gardening Express. ‘Its best known for its beautiful cascades of perfumed flowers and twisted stems. They love the sun and flower in spring, but it can also become very large – as high as 66 feet!’. Be sure to cut it back.

Wisteria is a characterful plant highly associated with country homes and cottage garden ideas, with the beautiful foliage cascading down many country cottages.

13. Encourage climbing plants around tree trunks

Pink climbing rose around trunk of an olive tree

Image credit: Future PLC/Mark Bolton

One fun way to use easy climbing plant ideas is by training them around other plants. Climbing plants of all varieties can offer a beautiful blanket of coverage of colour to conceal unattractive tree trunks.

‘If you’re looking for something more showy climbing roses or Clematis come in a myriad of beautiful colours and sizes, many long or repeat flowering,’ says Fiona Lamb. ‘Have a look a Rosa Claire Austin for a stunning creamy coloured climber or Clematis ‘Étoile Violette’ for an injection of later summer colour.’

14. Grow hearty Ivy for maximum coverage

Garden with lawn, wooden bench, stone planters and climbing plants against brick wall

Image credit: Future PLC/Mark Bolton

This common climbing plant can seem rather dark and dated, but there are many varieties in golden and lime green tones that can really freshen up a space. Plus the bonus with ivy is that there are very few places it will not grow. Be sure to keep it well trained by cutting back regularly or it can get out of hand and regularly remove older leaves to let young healthy ones through.

Number one rule, do not let ivy grow under roof tiles or into gutters – because this can prove problematic.

15. Attract wildlife with honeysuckle

Japanese honeysuckle

Image credit: Future PLC

This sweet-scented woodland favourite will grow fast and attract lots of wildlife – ideal as wildlife garden ideas become more prominent in the modern garden.

Honeysuckle can easily be combined with other climbers such as roses or clematis. There are different colours available from white to dark orange. They prefer their roots to be in a cool, damp shade.

16. Captivate with trailing clematis

Close up of climbing purple clematis

Image credit: Future PLC

These beautiful plants have become very popular, as their beautiful bell flowers come in almost every colour. They are easy to grow and take up little space. This favoured easy climbing plant ideas is perfect for giving country gardens that intimate, picturesque look.

‘It is important to make sure climbers aren’t left to grow under roof tiles or into gutters, as this can block drains and gutters’ warns Chris from Gardening Express. ‘This in the long term potentially cause structural problems.’

What’s the easiest climbing plant to grow?

Luckily, a lot of popular climbing plant ideas are easy to get going so long as they’re cared for and supported.

‘Top climbing plants, that are very easy to grow include clematis, honeysuckle (Lonicera), rose, wisteria and even grape vines,’ advises Chris from Gardening Express. ‘All offer different forms, shapes, colours and textures, so there is plenty of choice.’

What climbing plant grows fastest?

Climbers don’t like to hang around! Some of the easiest climbing plant ideas are also the quickest to grow. These include clematis, sweetpea, Rambling Roses and Virginia Creeper.

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