Position
Full sun to part shade





Trachelospermum
VAT included · plus
Your outdoor plant has just been packed, transported and unpacked, so give it a calm start before planting or placing it permanently. Remove all packaging carefully, check the pot, stems, visible roots and substrate moisture, and settle any loose growing medium back around the root ball. Water if the root ball feels dry, but do not leave the pot standing in water. For the first few days, keep the plant in a sheltered spot suited to its light needs, away from strong midday sun, heavy wind, frost and heat stress.
Do not move the plant straight into full exposure, especially if it is young, newly flushed, evergreen, recently pruned or greenhouse-grown. Gradually introduce more sun, wind and temperature variation over several days. If cold nights, storms, intense sun or hot dry weather are expected, keep the plant protected until conditions are more stable. Do not fertilize immediately after delivery; let the plant settle first and resume feeding only when it is actively growing and conditions are suitable.
Outdoor plants may arrive in different seasonal stages. Depending on the time of year, your plant may be leafy, flowering, newly sprouting, recently pruned, dormant, partly bare or leafless. Adjust care to what the plant is doing: actively growing plants need closer moisture checks, while dormant plants usually need protection from extremes and only light moisture management until growth resumes.
Plant outdoors when the soil is workable and weather conditions suit the plant type. Avoid planting during frost, heatwaves, waterlogged soil or very dry windy periods. It is better to keep the plant protected in its pot for a short time than to plant into stressful conditions. After planting, water thoroughly so the root ball and surrounding soil connect properly, then monitor moisture while the plant establishes.
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Evergreen climber
Position
Full sun to part shade
Moisture
Average to moist
Drainage
Free-draining
Hardiness
Hardy with shelter · -10°C
Mature size
400–800 × 400–800 cm
Winter habit
Evergreen
Bloom time
Summer
Winter care
Shelter outdoors in mild areas or overwinter containers frost-free
Containers
Pots with winter protection
Support
TrellisWirePergola
Pruning
Early spring, After flowering
Cultivar of an East Asian evergreen twining climber grown for pale pink fragrant flowers.
Trachelospermum asiaticum 'Pink Showers' is a woody evergreen climber grown for glossy leaves, twining stems and pale pink star-shaped flowers. The flowers carry a sweet jasmine-like scent, especially in warm sheltered air. It is a plant for a protected wall, pergola, large container or conservatory-style outdoor space, with the strongest performance where roots drain freely and stems receive warmth.
Ultimate size can be large in mild ground, with garden plants reaching in the 4 to 8 m range for height and spread where conditions allow. Trachelospermum builds a woody framework slowly at first, then gains strength once roots are settled. Containers keep 'Pink Showers' smaller and slower than open ground, which is useful for terraces and movable sheltered displays. This makes pot culture practical for colder areas, where the plant can be moved or protected during harsh weather.
Give this Asiatic jasmine a clear vertical route from the start. Young stems twine and need wires, trellis, an obelisk or another narrow support to follow. Start training early, because loose stems can tangle and create bare sections at the base. Tie in the main shoots gently, then allow side shoots to fill the cover. A fan of several stems usually gives better leaf cover than one congested strand.
On a wall, plant away from the base so rain can reach the rootball and the roots are not trapped in a dry strip. In a large container, set the support before planting and check that the pot is stable enough for a leafy climber in wind. A warm wall, fence line or sheltered balcony gives the best balance of heat and protection.
Full sun gives the strongest flowering in many climates, while partial shade can work when the site remains warm and bright. Cold wind is the main stress factor for evergreen foliage. A sheltered position reduces winter leaf scorch and helps flower buds develop on ripened growth. Warmth also improves scent, so placement near seating, doors or paths gives the plant a practical reason to be noticed.
Flowering time varies with cultivar, site and weather. A plant in a warm wall position can flower more heavily and over a longer window than one in a cool exposed pocket. Good summer moisture supports growth, but the soil still needs oxygen after watering. The root zone should hold some moisture in active growth, then drain cleanly after rain.
Fertile, well-drained soil is the safest starting point. Chalk, loam or sand-based soils can work when drainage is reliable and the plant is sheltered. In pots, use a peat-free loam-based compost with added mineral structure and a wide drainage path. Keep the crown clear of heavy mulch and make sure the container can shed winter rain.
For containers, water when the upper 25 to 35% of pot depth feels dry, then water deeply and let the pot drain. During establishment, check more often because a newly planted climber has a smaller active root system. In winter, reduce watering and keep the rootball just lightly moist during protected storage.
Prune in early spring or lightly after flowering to keep the plant inside its support. A light annual trim keeps the framework tidy and encourages side shoots. Remove winter-marked tips in spring, guide new stems back onto support, and shorten long whips once the plant has finished its main flowering. Regular guiding gives a fuller shape and keeps the base from becoming bare.
Heavy renovation is possible on established plants, but it can pause flowering while the framework rebuilds. For a container plant, a yearly trim is easier than waiting until the climber has outgrown its support. Young 'Pink Showers' plants settle best when the first stems are tied in early, giving the pale pink flowers a clear framework later.
Treat it as hardy with shelter, especially in colder inland winters where cold wind and wet roots increase stress. The glossy leaves may take on bronze tones in cold wind or bright winter light, especially on exposed balconies. That winter colour usually softens again as temperatures rise. Root stress starts fastest where wet compost, cold wind and poor drainage combine. In colder districts, a container can move to a bright sheltered spot where the rootball holds a steadier temperature.
In the ground, 'Pink Showers' needs a warm wall, reliable drainage, shelter and a root run with space to anchor. In pots, raise the base on feet so rain drains cleanly after wet spells. Keep the crown open and tie stems so foliage rests away from damp surfaces.
Use it on a sheltered wall, warm fence, large patio pot or balcony screen where pale pink flowers can be seen close up. This pink-flowered form works well where scent, evergreen cover and soft flower colour all matter. Place it near seating, an entrance or a sheltered walkway where the scented flowers can be noticed close up. A young plant may grow modestly at first, then extend more firmly once roots fill the planting pocket.
Patchy evergreen foliage usually traces back to wind, winter wet, or a container drying hard in summer. Yellowing leaves usually point to cold wet roots, low feed reserves or a tired container mix. Dry leaf edges are commonly linked with wind exposure or repeated hard dry-downs in pots. Sparse flowering usually links to shade, cool exposure or late pruning after buds have formed. Start with the site, then adjust watering depth, support and trimming time.
Trachelospermum asiaticum 'Pink Showers' rewards patience. It brings vertical cover and scent together, with foliage that keeps the wall green between flowering periods. With warmth, drainage and a sturdy frame, it can become a lasting feature on a protected wall or in a generous pot.
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