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Gardening

What to grow over an arch

(19 Posts)
honeyrose Sun 14-Jun-26 21:24:48

I have just bought a rose arch from a well known budget supermarket. This has been installed in the garden, over a pathway, but I don’t know what to grow up it! I’d like something that’s hardy, grows fast, with some colour (preferably not yellow), fragrant and long-living. Not asking for much am I?! Can anyone suggest anything suitable? The soil is good, not sandy, more clayey. I’m not successful with clematis, not sure why, but I like it. I don’t particularly want roses as roses have been either side of the path before and I’ve heard that you shouldn’t plant roses where roses have already been. I’m at a loss to know what to plant, but I want to put something in soon to give it time to establish (is this the right time of year?).

LauraNorderr Sun 14-Jun-26 21:29:14

How about honeysuckle, there’s a nice pinky white one or jasmine with its lovely perfume and tiny white flowers. You can grow climbing roses through the middle of either.

Franski Sun 14-Jun-26 21:29:43

Honeysuckle...jasmine....? We have both and they grow quickly and are fragrant. Also passion...I love the flowers.

LauraNorderr Sun 14-Jun-26 21:30:16

Sorry it didn’t register that you don’t want roses.

Franski Sun 14-Jun-26 21:30:34

Oh I crossed over with yours LauraN. Great minds!

Grandmafrench Sun 14-Jun-26 21:44:48

Agree, honeysuckle or jasmine for the perfume. Honeysuckle grows very quickly. For a real splash of colour with one of those, if you have sunshine, is Morning Glory - Ipomoea learii - choose a violet one with a shocking pink/orange centre. Lots of regular watering and they're not fussy!

Gin Sun 14-Jun-26 23:47:31

I have three arches and grow a variety of plants to climb over them. I have quite a few clematis, one a very small cream flower that flowers prolifically but only once. My jasmine has gone bananas this year, itv smells delightful but is swamping everything else. I do have roses. and every year I grow from seed Spanish Flag and this gived a really vibrant splash of colour in late summer. This year I have planted a Mexican Trunpet Flower which is climbing vigorously, I cannot wait for it to bloom, it is up to five feet so far this year.

AskAlice Mon 15-Jun-26 08:32:28

Just a word of warning - honeysuckle does grow fast and is lovely, but the arch you have bought is, I suspect, quite lightweight. I made the mistake of growing a honeysuckle over one of those (I got mine online) and the eventual weight of it buckled the arch after a few years. Passion Flower likewise is a pretty heavy plant once it gets going.

I'd try Spanish Flag (Mina Lobata) as Gin has suggested - although it does have a bit of yellow in it. Or a pink version of Black Eyed Susan.

Esmay Mon 15-Jun-26 08:44:39

Hydrangea Petiolaris ,Clematis Montana ,Wisteria and Passion flower are all very pretty on an arch .
You do need to think about pruning in case they become too heavy .
I love an arch in a garden-it's like a door into another world .

honeyrose Mon 15-Jun-26 10:51:53

Thanks everyone. I’ll start Googling your suggestions. It IS quite a lightweight structure, as rightly observed, so I’ll beware of anything too heavy growing up it. We actually took one length of metal struts out of it (it’s sectional) so it’s approx 6 feet tall. I do like the idea of something with year round interest (if possible) and preferably with fragrance, but that’s not essential.

LauraNorderr Mon 15-Jun-26 11:51:54

As we have moved house I can’t post pics of previous arches but would love to see photos of those mentioned so far.
Honeyrose would probably appreciate photos too.

Shel1951 Tue 16-Jun-26 12:30:44

Passion flowers are lovely and possibly a search on Google AI to find a clematis that grows in your soil? I had an arch and mixed 2 different climbers which flowered at different times

twiglet77 Tue 16-Jun-26 13:11:33

I have one and it blew over at every breeze, now it’s cable-tied to the gate hinge and a post the other side. My clematis snapped. It has sweet peas this year, but it needed a bit of netting too

AskAlice Tue 16-Jun-26 20:08:40

The one I've got now is at the bottom of garden and has two clematis growing up it. It is north facing, the heads of the clematis get the sun in the afternoon when the sun comes round to the west, but the roots are still in shade which is what clematis likes.

It's also wired to the fence posts with cup hooks so that it doesn't get blown about.

MT62 Tue 16-Jun-26 20:12:14

Star jasmine for the smell

Suki70 Tue 16-Jun-26 23:04:01

I can echo the warning not to grow anything too heavy over the arch as today I had to dismantle a metal arch which had rusted and collapsed. It was the second one we’ve had and had honeysuckle on one side and a Rambling Rector rose on the other. Both glorious but needed more pruning than I’d given them. I would go for an evergreen honeysuckle and Jasmine plus a clematis.

Nannytopsy Tue 16-Jun-26 23:43:16

Trachelospermum jasminoides. Its evergreen and scented flowers in early summer.

honeyrose Wed 17-Jun-26 16:33:41

Thanks - very helpful replies. I wish that I’d splashed out a bit more money and brought a stronger one so that I could have more choice of planting, but I’ll bear the weight problem in mind when choosing something. I saw a bargain rose arch (£10) in a well-known German-owned supermarket locally and bought it!

AskAlice Wed 17-Jun-26 17:47:18

Just an idea, but if you grown annual climbers on your arch rather than heavier climbing perennials you could still make the arch a feature in the winter/early spring by stringing solar powered lights through it.

I've done that with the arch at the bottom of my garden (which is actually against the fence so doesn't lead to anything but adds height and interest.) If you position the solar panel right up at the top I've found it still gets enough light from weak sunshine even in the darker months to put on a light show for a couple of hours each evening. And in the summer the lights show through the planting and make it a lovely feature.