- New









Height : about 10 to 30 cm (depending on seasons)
Fast grower

Discover the Passiflora incarnata the hardiest of the Passiflora family - hardy, medicinal and delicious!
Passiflora incarnata tolerates heavy frosts, disappearing in winter and reappearing in spring, but don't hesitate to mulch its base for the first few years. It's a vigorous liana that will also need a solid support to hang its large tendrils and spread its magnificent three-lobed leaves!
Passiflora incarnata's splendid purple flowers with swirling sepals exude a pleasant tropical fragrance. Then come its tasty, edible fruits, which can be eaten with a spoon like any self-respecting passion fruit!
This purple passionflower is also a medicinal plant that treats anxiety: it calms anxiety attacks, relieves muscular tension, and helps insomnia by creating a state of relaxation conducive to sleep. Passiflora incarnata is used in many medicines, but can also be drunk as an herbal tea by infusing its leaves.Thus installed, Passiflora incarnata will offer you its splendid violet flowers with swirling sepals, exhaling a pleasant tropical fragrance. Then come its tasty, edible fruits, which can be eaten with a spoon like any self-respecting passion fruit!
Although it can withstand extreme cold, it also likes heat, so don't hesitate to place it in the shelter of a wall or building, and plant several vines or other Passifloras nearby to encourage cross-pollination and fruiting.
Passiflora incarnata is a hardy climber that nurtures and nourishes, what more could you ask for?

When you receive your plant, repot it in a pot slightly larger than the bucket, which must be well pierced. Avoid pot covers which prevent residual water from draining away and encourage fungal diseases. Choose a fine potting soil, ideally with added perlite or sand to lighten the substrate (do not use garden soil or acidic soil such as heather). Then plan two repottings per year (spring and autumn), gradually increasing the size of the pot and adapting it to the size of the root network (the roots must have room, but not too much as the plant must be able to dry out its substrate between waterings). This avoids having to add fertilizer, which always risks burning the fragile roots of the plants and making the plant wither as soon as the fertilizer is stopped.
Moderate watering: watering should be copious (the whole root ball should be wet), but wait until the substrate has dried deeply before watering again (you can stick your finger in the soil: as long as you feel moisture, do not water). Your plant will recover better from a lack of water than from an excess of water. Always water at the base of the plant, and do not mist it, because stagnant water in the armpit of the leaves favors cryptogamic diseases. If your atmosphere is too dry, put bowls of water nearby (above radiators for example), so that evaporation humidifies the air.
Your plant is best taken out in summer, full sun is perfect for it. It should be brought indoors in winter, and ideally placed in a warm and luminous place, like in a veranda or behind a window. It fears excessive humidity when temperatures are low, so avoid cold rooms. Attention: do not take it out and bring it in all the time, it should be taken out in good weather, then brought in when the cold weather arrives, because plants adapt their foliage to their environment, which should not constantly change. It often happens that plants lose their foliage when they are taken out and/or put in, don't worry, your plant will adapt and will emit its new foliage accordingly.
If your climate allows it, you will be able to plant your plant in full ground, a full sun is recommended. We advise you however to cultivate it in pot the first year and to make it spend the first winter in the heat, in order to strengthen it well. Plant it between the end of the risk of frost (generally at the beginning of May) and the end of August, in a soil which must be light and draining; do not hesitate to add sand and fine potting soil if necessary. Be careful with the minimum temperatures indicated: they are given for a mature plant, and you have to take into account the wind which accentuates the cold felt, as well as the water retention capacity of your soil, which can rot the roots if it is not sufficiently draining. So take a little safety margin!
This plant is very easy to prune, which will make it branch out.
Our plants are grown naturally, without chemical fertilizers, so we advise you to repot them regularly (twice a year) rather than adding fertilizer.
If your plants are under attack by aphids or other pests, the best way to control them is by hand. Change their soil, remove as many undesirables as possible by hand and then shower your plants with a strong stream of water to eliminate any eggs that may be present. Spray them (insist on the underside of the leaves) with liquid black soap diluted in water. Repeat the operation several times at a few days interval. Take them outside in good weather, rain, sun and wind will kill most of the aggressors!
Plant several vines or other Passifloras nearby for fruit.