41+ Trumpet Creeper Trumpet Vine Leaves Background. By mary simpson trumpet vine (campsis radicans), also called trumpet creeper, generally takes five to six years to mature enough to bloom, but the flowers are worth the wait. Badly infected leaves become discolored, distorted, and droop.
Campsis radicans commonly known as trumpet vine or trumpet creeper, also known in north america as cow itch vine or hummingbird vine, is a species of flowering plant of the family bignoniaceae. The foliage is pinnately compound: It is native to the southeastern u.
Campsis radicans, the trumpet vine or trumpet creeper (also known in north america as cow itch vine or hummingbird vine), is a species of flowering plant in the family bignoniaceae, native to the eastern united states, and naturalized elsewhere.
Not to be confused with aggressive and often invasive american trumpet vine (campsis radicans), chinese trumpet creeper plants are nonetheless prodigious bloomers and growers. The foliage is pinnately compound: Trumpet creeper is a deciduous or partly evergreen vine that climbs by aerial rootlets and twining stems. Images are provided in galleries and are available by common name, scientific name, family, ecosystem, and wetland indicator status.