Poking around a bit on search engines found nothing on “ivy growth rate.”
Growth rates will vary with varying conditions (light, soil, temperature water, nutrients, etc.) so anything that anyone will be able to offer is a best guess.
Am I the only one who thinks that the South Eastern Conference (SEC) missed a good thing by not becoming the “Kudzu Conference” when they expanded to 12 teams becoming one of the “superconferences” in 1990?
What does kudzu suggest, And what would it say about a conference named after it?
Kudzu is a pest plant. It is a native Asian plant introduced to control soil erosion, but it liked it so much over here it overgrows EVERYTHING and chokes off their nutrients and steals their sunlight. In South Carolina, where I’m from, there are stretches of native pine forest where nothing grows except Kudzu, and the trunks of the tall long needle pines are completely covered with it, all the way up.
I would expect it would be illegal to intentionally plant Kudzu in a place that hasn’t been exposed to it yet. If not, your neighbors will certainly become pissed off, at least.
My mom planted some English ivy on the front of out house about four years ago. It has easily spread over ten feet in all directions. It has been getting into her other plants and I think she is having a hell of a time controlling it. I don’t think she should have planted it. There are older brick buildings here that are completely engulfed by it. You can’t see any bricks and can barely see the windows. It requires a huge amount of maintainance.
English ivy has been the bane of the Pacific Northwest. A thousand years from thats all there will be.
A couple of lovely climbing deciduous vines I recommend are whisteria and the clematis. I find they are both much easier to control and don’t use “suction cups” like ivy that leaves marks and pull off paint when removed. Whisteria is much prettier than the clematis IMHO, and has really beautiful vines.
They are both trainable to climb lattices, which are only needed for the first year or so. Watch out if you train them up your house because they might sneak under roof tiles on their way toward the chimney. You can prune the hell out of both of them and they will never die. Also expect alot more birds because the stuff is virtually a bird apartment house.