Grow easy-care mandevillas for season-long color

Sun Parasol mandevillas brighten this patio. Courtesy Suntory Flowers.

With their bold color and tropical beauty, easy-care mandevillas make excellent additions to patios, decks and gardens. Train them onto a trellis, allow them to cascade from a hanging basket or combine them with other plants. Enjoy summer-long blossoms and the butterflies, hummingbirds and other pollinators that stop by for a visit. 

Once divided into two different groups, dipladenias and mandevillas, they”™re all now considered mandevillas by botanists. You will find both names still in use, with dipladenias referring to those with a more mounded, shrub-like habit and mandevillas being more of a trailing vine. Whatever you call them, you are sure to find one or more that complement your garden and container designs. 

Mandevillas are grown as annuals in all but zones”¯10a to 11b where some varieties are hardy. They flower best in full sun but will tolerate some shade. These South American native plants thrive in the hot, humid weather of summer, which is just around the corner, so now is a good time for planting them. 

Select a potting mix or location with organically rich, well-drained soil. Use a slow-release fertilizer at the start of the season and make a second application, if needed, mid-season. Read and follow the label directions when using fast-release liquid fertilizers. 

Mandevillas are usually flowering when you purchase them at the garden center. They will continue to bloom on new growth throughout the summer and fall until frost kills the plant.”¯ 

The well-behaved vining mandevilla will not strangle nearby plants. Just give it a trellis or obelisk for the vines to wrap around and climb. Their slightly woody stems provide greater stability than other vines that regularly need to be secured to the support. Just tuck any new tendrils through the trellis, pointing them in the desired direction as needed.”¯ 

Use vining varieties in a container of their own or as a vertical accent on a trellis in mixed containers or flowerbeds. Set pots by an entrance to your home or garden for a colorful welcome or use them to dress up a bare wall or fence. 

The more compact shrubby types can be planted with other annual flowers in the garden, grown in hanging baskets or used as a filler in mixed container gardens. Just prune off or tuck any wayward branches behind neighboring plants. 

Disease-resistant”¯Sun Parasol mandevillas”¯offer an array of colors, including white, yellow, apricot, pink, crimson and even red-and-white striped flowers. The original shrubby Sun Parasol mandevillas are available in the widest range of colors while the garden group makes excellent hanging baskets. Grow the vigorous climbing Giant group varieties for the largest flowers and the Pretty group when looking for a vine with the most flowers, dense vigorous growth and more cold tolerance.”¯ 

Include them on your patio, deck or balcony, and situate a few outside your windows. You will enjoy the flowers and winged visitors whether inside looking out or relaxing in your outdoor spaces. 

Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including “The Midwest Gardener”™s Handbook, Second”¯Edition””¯and “Small Space Gardening.””¯She hosts “The Great Courses”™””¯How to Grow Anything” instant video and DVD”¯series”¯and the nationally-syndicated”¯“Melinda”™s Garden Moment””¯TV and radio program. Myers is a columnist and contributing editor for”¯Birds & Blooms”¯magazine and was commissioned by Tree World Plant Care for her expertise to write this article. For more, visit here.”¯www.MelindaMyers.com.