Flower of the Day, Cleome Spider Flower: Plant Just Once - Flower Power Daily (2024)

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Flower of the Day, Cleome Spider Flower: Plant Just Once - Flower Power Daily (1)

Spider Flower, Bee plant, cleome. This tall flowering plant is like the gawky girl that doesn’t get asked to dance in junior high school, but becomes a model when she’s 16.

The cleome doesn’t look like much in a nursery. Well, actually, it does look like a baby marijuana plant. Cleome, below top, are often mistaken for pot plants, below: showing the same flat, hand-shaped leaf formation.

Flower of the Day, Cleome Spider Flower: Plant Just Once - Flower Power Daily (2)

Flower of the Day, Cleome Spider Flower: Plant Just Once - Flower Power Daily (3)

But cleome come into their own once they burst into flower. White, pink, rose and purple, they bloom from midsummer until fall. They are easy to grow from seed, although they like to be left on top of the soil, or barely covered. Once they start growing, they are laden with spidery seed pods. But that doesn’t stop them.

They keep flowering, and climbing. They do not need staking, even when six feet tall.

Nearly immune from garden pests, able to grow in any kind of garden soil and, once established, able to thrive without regular watering, these lesser-known plants deserve to become stalwarts. And if anyone stops by to admire your cleome, just zip off a ripe seed pod and hand it to them. Each whisker becomes a seed pod, and each pod can hold up to 18 seeds. Your friend will be off to the races. They will either love you or, if the cleomes take over their garden, hate you.

Consider planting a pink-and-white garden: low-growing early dianthus in front. Then more dianthus, Sweet William, and hot pink globe amaranth. Behind that, pink and white cosmos. And in the back row cleome. Bee balm could be slipped in there somewhere for a full-service pollinator garden. The bees will love you. Or use Sparkler Rose, below, a dwarf version of cleome that grows “only” four feet tall but, like its taller sister, will still attract hummingbirds, butterflies, bees and hawk moths.

Flower of the Day, Cleome Spider Flower: Plant Just Once - Flower Power Daily (4)

Now hear this. Most people buy the hassleriana variety cleome, the ones at garden centers and sold in seed packets.

You can stump visitors (the ignorant ones who have already accused you of growing pot and the knowledgeable ones who know cleome) by going outside the local nursery and the Park Seed catalog.

There are hundreds of varieties of cleome, including some beauties from Mexico that were shown at the Chelsea Flower show in May. This is Senorita Rosalita, a shorter, sterile variety.

It won’t self-seed. It won’t tower over everything else. It won’t look like the other cleomes. One variety looks like this:

Flower of the Day, Cleome Spider Flower: Plant Just Once - Flower Power Daily (5)

Proven Winners’ version looks like this:

Flower of the Day, Cleome Spider Flower: Plant Just Once - Flower Power Daily (6)

They both promise profuse flowers, since the plants’ energy is focused on flowers rather than seeds. That means they won’t throw their seeds all over your gardens.

And then there are the edible cleomes. George Washington and Thomas Jefferson both grew the cleome hassleriana. But Thomas Jefferson also grew a cleome called Spiderwisp, cleome gynandra, a relative of the mustard plant used as a seasoning in Africa. There is no question that the slaves at Monticello brought their knowledge of plants, and perhaps some plants, with them.

Cleome in is a tropical, subtropical plant. It is perennial in zones 10 and 11. It is likely Jefferson ordered cleome gynandra from Bartram’s nursery catalog, where it had already appeared by 1809. (The decorative and inedible plant does not show up; those seeds were probably shared among neighbors.)

Flower of the Day, Cleome Spider Flower: Plant Just Once - Flower Power Daily (7)

This plant, also known as Spiderwisp, was highly prized as a seasoning. The early slaves, farmers and botanists valued each others’ knowledge. The Spiderwisp (also called Cat’s Whiskers, because of the long stamens typical of all cleomes) has four-petaled flowers, just like the mustards, seed pods similar to mustards, and its cooked leaves taste similar to radishes.

We have to stop here and note that there is a long-standing DNA investigation of the connection between cleome and the Brassicaceae (mustard) family. It’s hard to believe, but there is still a question on how and when these two families diverged.

For instance, Spiderwisp’s oil is closer to garlic. So is it mustard? Radish? Garlic? Whatever it is, all over Africa parts of the plant were used to season stews and meats.

Mind you, as much as it looks like cleome hassleriana, it is not the same plant. Back in Jefferson’s time, slaves and slave owners knew how to tell the difference.

Today, perhaps we should look more carefully at our flowering plants.

Some are pretty. Some taste good. Some are even medicinal.

There is a difference. – Linda Lee

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Flower of the Day, Cleome Spider Flower: Plant Just Once - Flower Power Daily (2024)

FAQs

Does Cleome come back every year? ›

Technically, cleome is an annual, though it may survive for longer than one season in parts of Florida. Cleome often self-seeds, which means you'll have plants in the same location year after year. However, certain newer cultivars like 'Senorita Rosalita' are sterile and won't produce seeds.

What is the benefit of Cleome spider flower? ›

Leaves, young stems and flowers are edible and contain substantial amounts of vitamins A and C (which diminish with processing), iron and calcium. Spider flower is often eaten along with other foods, due to its bitter taste.

Is Cleome spider flower a perennial or annual? ›

Spider flower, Cleome hassleriana (sometimes referred to incorrectly as C. hasslerana or by the synonym C. spinosa) is a common annual flower from South America (Paraguay, Uruguay, Argentina and southern Brazil) that also goes by other common names including spider legs and grandfather's whiskers.

How often should I water Cleome? ›

Cleome Hassleriana needs 0.8 cups of water every 9 days when it doesn't get direct sunlight and is potted in a 5.0" pot. Use our water calculator to personalize watering recommendations to your environment or download Greg for more advanced recommendations for all of your plants.

Do you cut back cleome? ›

Cleomes need very light pruning. Snip off dead leaves or damaged areas during the growing season. If the plants are spindly right before planting, trim them back by half to encourage new growth once they are in the ground.

Does cleome spread? ›

Height/Spread

Depending on the cultivar or series, cleome will range in height 1½- to 5-feet tall with a 1- to 2-feet spread. The newer dwarf cultivars are 1½- to 4-feet tall by 1- to 2-feet wide, making them a good choice for smaller areas and containers.

Is Cleome poisonous to dogs? ›

Spider Flowers, or Cleome hassleriana, are known for their showy blooms and distinctive seed pods. They contain various natural compounds typical of plants, such as flavonoids, saponins, and tannins. However, these substances are not considered harmful to dogs.

How long does it take Cleome to bloom from seed? ›

Spider flowers begin blooming as soon as they are established (about 10 weeks after seed germination) and won't stop until they are knocked out by the first frost.

Can you eat Cleome flowers? ›

The tender leaves, flowers and shoots can be cooked and eaten as a cooked vegetable or added to cornmeal porridge.

Does cleome attract hummingbirds? ›

Cleome serrulata offers itself as a great late-season nectar-producing flower that attracts a wide array of pollinators as well as many hummingbirds.

Are cleome invasive? ›

Cleome hassleriana Chod. This map identifies those states that list this species on their invasive species list or law. This species does not appear on any state or national invasive species lists.

How to make cleome bushier? ›

Although the height of cleome is often an asset, it's possible to make your plants bushier and more compact by pruning or pinching them back in late spring, which will encourage more branching.

What is spider flower good for? ›

The leaves have anti-inflammatory properties and preliminary scientific studies have suggested that spider plant may be useful in the development of a treatment for arthritis. Spider plant is also known to have insecticidal properties as well.

What is eating my cleome leaves? ›

The harlequin bug feeds on its host plant by sucking the plant's juices. The literal “sucking-to-death” of the host plant results in wilting, browning, and eventual death. Throughout most of its range, the harlequin bug continues to feed and reproduce during the entire year.

Should I deadhead cleome? ›

Because the new blooms form on top of the old ones, the plants require no deadheading. Cleome is sometimes called spider plant because of the seed pods that dangle down from blooms. Though its tall, floriferous and easy to grow, cleome has not always been a popular choice.

Does cleome reseed itself? ›

Cleome is a great summer annual that freely reseeds itself in the garden.

Should you deadhead cleome? ›

Because the new blooms form on top of the old ones, the plants require no deadheading. Cleome is sometimes called spider plant because of the seed pods that dangle down from blooms. Though its tall, floriferous and easy to grow, cleome has not always been a popular choice.

Is cleome poisonous to dogs? ›

Spider Flowers, or Cleome hassleriana, are known for their showy blooms and distinctive seed pods. They contain various natural compounds typical of plants, such as flavonoids, saponins, and tannins. However, these substances are not considered harmful to dogs.

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