Climbing plants at Edwards Garden Centres
Walls, Fences & Pergolas

Climbing Plants

Climbing honeysuckle varieties grown locally at our Staffordshire nurseries, perfect for adding vertical interest and fragrance to your garden.

Climbing Honeysuckle for Your Garden

Climbing plants transform bare walls, fences and pergolas into living features. Our climbing Lonicera (honeysuckle) varieties are vigorous growers that reward you with beautiful foliage and fragrant flowers, bringing colour and scent to vertical spaces in your garden.

These varieties are grown at our nurseries in Eccleshall and Stone, so they are fully acclimatised to the Staffordshire climate. Honeysuckle is wonderfully easy to grow and will thrive in most garden situations, tolerating a range of soil types and aspects.

Why Choose Climbing Honeysuckle?

  • Fast-growing and easy to establish
  • Fragrant flowers that attract pollinators
  • Perfect for covering walls, fences, arches and pergolas
  • Tolerant of partial shade and most soil types
  • Provides wildlife habitat and nesting sites for birds

Our Climbing Varieties

Lonicera Green Breeze

Climbing Honeysuckle

Lonicera Purple Storm

Climbing Honeysuckle

Planting Tips

Sun & Shade

Honeysuckle grows well in full sun or partial shade. The base of the plant prefers to be in shade with the top growth in sun.

Best Planting Time

Plant container-grown climbers at any time of year, but autumn and spring give the best establishment results.

Support

Provide trellis, wires or an obelisk for the plant to twine around. Honeysuckle is a natural twiner and will grip well.

Looking for more climbers? Our team can advise on the best options for your garden. Pop in and see us.

Call: 01785 850 400

Explore More Plant Categories

Transform Your Garden with Climbers

Our team can help you choose the right climbing plant for your wall, fence or garden structure. Get in touch today.

👨‍🌾

Percy - Garden Expert

40 years of growing wisdom

👨‍🌾

Afternoon! Percy here. Been pottering around gardens for over 40 years now, and there's not much I haven't seen. What can I help you with today - got a poorly plant, planning a new border, or just fancy a chat about what's looking good this season?

Quick questions: