Plants to Seamlessly Integrate a Pergola Into Your Garden (2024)

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These plants will make your pergola feel less like a man-made structure plopped in your garden.

By

Elizabeth Waddington

Plants to Seamlessly Integrate a Pergola Into Your Garden (1)

Elizabeth Waddington

Writer, Permaculture Designer, Sustainability Consultant

  • University of St Andrews (MA)

Elizabeth has worked since 2010 as a freelance writer and consultant covering gardening, permaculture, and sustainable living. She has also written a number of books and e-books on gardens and gardening.

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Updated May 14, 2021 01:18PM EDT

Fact checked by

Haley Mast

Plants to Seamlessly Integrate a Pergola Into Your Garden (2)

Fact checked byHaley Mast

  • Harvard University Extension School

Haley Mast is a freelance writer, fact-checker, and small organic farmer in the Columbia River Gorge. She enjoys gardening, reporting on environmental topics, and spending her time outside snowboarding or foraging. Topics of expertise and interest include agriculture, conservation, ecology, and climate science.

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Plants to Seamlessly Integrate a Pergola Into Your Garden (3)

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A pergola or porch structure can really enhance the amenity of your garden. But man-made structures can sometimes feel a little jarring in a garden landscape—unless you integrate plenty of plants on and around them.

To make sure your new pergola or porch feels less like a new addition, and more like an integral part of your garden, you can add climbing plants or vines.As a sustainable garden designer, I often help my clients find ways to blend plants and built features in their gardens. Below are some suggestions to help you "dress" your pergola or porch with climbing plants.

Edible Climbers

As a permaculture designer, I always encourage people to understand how they can obtain an edible yield in their gardens. Obtaining a yield, as I often explain, does not have to come at the expense of aesthetics. Edible planting is not only useful, but it can also be beautiful. And that is certainly true when it comes to edible climbing plants.

Here are some climbers or vines that you could grow up a pergola or porch:

  • Grapevines – (Usually USDA zones 6-10)
  • Riverbank grapes(USDA zones 2-6)
  • Kiwi (USDA zones 6-9)
  • Blackberries (USDA zones 5-9) — Thornless blackberries may be best, and these can be trained up and over a garden structure. Many cane fruits can also be trained up the side of the structure.
  • Hardy Kiwi (USDA zones 4-8)
  • Passionfruit (USDA zones 9-12)
  • Passiflora mollisima (Banana passionfruit) (USDA zones 5-9)
  • Passiflora incarnata (Maypops) (USDA zones 7-11)
  • Hops (USDA zones 5-7)
  • Apios americana (USDA zones 3-7)
  • Climbing nasturtiums (Perennial in USDA zones 8-11, grown as an annual elsewhere)
  • Malabar spinach (Perennial USDA zones 9-11)
  • Chocolate vine (USDA zones 4-8)
  • Loofah (USDA zones 10-12)
  • Chayote (USDA zones 9-12)

A pergola or porch might also become an integral part of your vegetable garden if you use the structure to grow. For example:

  • Cordon tomatoes
  • Pumpkins/ Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Melons
  • Cucamelons
  • Pole beans
  • Runner beans
  • Purple hyacinth beans
  • Garden peas

These and a number of other common edible crops can be grown vertically up such a structure to make the most of your space. And since the pergola or porch will be against your home, this means food will always be close at hand, and you can easily keep an eye on adjacent to your kitchen garden.

It definitely makes sense to grow edibles against and over a structure where possible since this is one more way to obtain a yield and make the most of all the space available to you on your property.

Ornamental Climbers

You do not just have to grow edibles. To make sure you have plenty of wildlife around to help you with your garden endeavors, you should make sure to have plenty of attractive climbers and vines which appeal to them as well as you.

Some great options to consider include:

  • Aristolochia
  • Bignonia
  • Campsis radicans
  • Celastrus scandens (Native bittersweet, not oriental bittersweet)
  • Clematis ssp.
  • Climbing or rambling roses
  • Ivy (Take care, however, as some can be invasive in some areas, choosing a native ivy is usually best.)
  • Lonicera (Native Honeysuckles)
  • Mikania scandens
  • Parthenocissus
  • Wisteria (N American native Wistera fructescens not the Chinese wisteria which can be invasive.)
  • Garrya elliptica
  • Hydrangea anomala
  • Jasmine
  • Star Jasmine (Trachylospermum jasminoides)

Quick growing vines can be great for covering a pergola or porch. But it is important to think about which may take over and be invasive in your area. However, even invasive vines can be useful. Kudzu, for example, should not be introduced, but, as a quiet aside,if you find some it is worth noting that this is an edible vine. So to keep it from spreading, eat as much of it as you can.

The list above is by no means meant to be exhaustive. But perhaps it will give you some design inspiration for your garden structure.

Remember: A pergola or porch can be far more than a structure to sit or eat beneath. It can and should be an integral part of your garden. Use the right plants on and around it, and it will blend in and create the perfect bridge between your garden and your home—and be a wonderful place to spend time throughout the year.

Plants to Seamlessly Integrate a Pergola Into Your Garden (2024)

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