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| you are here: vines in garden > articles about vines (including Clematis) > Clematis ‘Bill MacKenzie’ from the Tangutica Group
Clematis 'Bill MacKenzie' from the Tangutica Group Szczepan Marczyński
What makes
Clematis 'Bill MacKenzie' worth cultivating is the fact that it remains attractive until late autumn and winter, adding interest to the garden. It's a vigorous vine using petioles (leaf stalks) to wrap around the supports, with ability to quickly cover tall fences, arbours or unsightly buildings. It grows up to 6-7 m and branches rapidly, but it's less rampant than
Fallopia Aubertii. The list of its virtues is quite extensive, with beautiful yellow flowers, silky seed heads, green leaves lasting well into early November, long flowering period, and low site requirements, as just some of the most prominent ones.
A member of Tangutica Group,
Clematis 'Bill MacKenzie' thrives best in sunny or lightly shaded locations. It's fully hardy and quite undemanding, tolerates well dry poor soil, but will perform badly in dense and soppy one, so good drainage is essential. No special pruning is needed, but you can cut it back hard if you need to keep it in bounds. From a practical point of view this is best done somewhere around the end of March and the beginning of April, and the plant should be cut 10-30 cm from the ground.
It makes a great subject for a very effective screen, suitable for growing over tall fences, arbours, pergolas, or even scaling trees.
One of its close relatives from the Tangutica Group which can be used in a similar way is
Clematis 'Orange Peel', which has recently been renamed
'Last Dance' on account of its late bloom time.
It has small (4-5 cm across) intensely yellow flowers with exceptionally thick sepals that turn to orange-yellow after the first autumn chills. It flowering season starts in July-August but lasts well into mid-November.
It's a less vigorous grower than
Clematis 'Bill Mackenzie', reaching 3-5 m, has smaller green-blue leaves and is less free-flowering.
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