Growing bindweed

I recently bought bindweed seeds. The market said that it can be grown as a hanging plant. Tell me how to grow it? What land is suitable for it?

There is nothing easier than growing ordinary bindweed. The soil is ordinary - garden soil, when they grow up - you tie up strings or put some kind of support so that he can weave. That's all.

In our country, bindweed grows by itself in ordinary soil like a weed near an apple tree. We never look after him at all. So this is truly one of the simplest and most unpretentious garden flowers.

My mother once planted this plant near a plum tree, and I took it and simply tore it out, told my mother that I had found the reason why the plum tree did not bear fruit. In short, when she saw the “parasite” she laughed for a long time.

I like to plant such plants in large hanging baskets. Then they begin to hang down and look beautiful. And besides, bindweed in a basket will not grow as much as in open ground and will not interfere with other plants.

Mainly caring for bindweed consists of loosening and watering, but there are some hybrid varieties that can also be fed. For example, I feed some flowers and a little of him.

Bindweed grows on any soil, only before planting it, peat chips are added to the hole, and when the buds appear, they are sprinkled with wood ash.

Loaches are generally hardy and can grow in any soil you have in your garden. Here it grows on its own, we don’t even pay attention to it.

Bindweed does an excellent job of decorating in the garden, and in your area in general. If somewhere something looks unpresentable, then feel free to plant this flower there and it will braid everything in literally a month. I don't give him any special care.

On our site, bindweed grows on the sides of the gazebo. We used to plant grapes, but they regularly froze here and we got tired of it. We planted bindweed and now we have virtually no problems with deco.