The flower language of wisteria and its symbolic significance

The flower language of wisteria is to die for love, to indulge in love, to yearn for love and so on. I miss you, and I can give it to my lover to represent my thoughts and love.

Wisteria has strong adaptability and vitality, and can be planted in parks, courtyards and other places. Strong climbing ability, can be made into various shapes. When it blossoms, it looks like a purple waterfall.

Wisteria means longevity. Wisteria has a very long life span, it can live to 100 years old, and its vitality is extremely strong. It can grow normally in high temperature environment. You can put the seedlings at home or plant them in the yard, so that your family can live a long and healthy life and be safe every day. It can also be given to the elderly who have lived all their lives to express their blessings.

A bunch of wisteria flowers are lavender and flying all over the sky, which can create a romantic atmosphere. It can be planted on a flower bed, or given to a lover at a wedding. It can express love and hope to grow old together.

plant culture

The wisteria crown is like a butterfly. When the flowers bloom, what a wonderful place it would be if there are thousands of purple butterflies flying, with dry branches and green leaves, enjoying the cool, drinking tea and reading under the wisteria frame. "Flower Sutra" said: "Wisteria climbs on the edge of the tree, and the vine is connected with the tree. They bend at each other, and some dragons haunt the waves.

Mid-spring blossoms, drooping and swaying, just like sitting under it, you can forget the world. The record of holding an urn in northern Shu says: "In February, wisteria flowers are spike-shaped, purple and drooping, which looks so natural."

China has a long history of planting wisteria. Before the Republic of China, many official residences and private gardens in Beijing planted wisteria to beautify their courtyards, and many of them were well known. For example, in front of the "Wuyu Bookstore" by Yu Minzhong, a university student, minister of military aircraft and calligrapher of Wenhua Temple in the Qing Dynasty, wisteria is full of shelves and smells fragrant.

Liang, a college student in Qingdongge, was in front of the "Qingqintang", and wisteria flourished, occupying the glory of all things; Zhu Yizun, a poet and bibliophile in the Qing Dynasty, is fascinated by the vines of Gu Teng Bookstore. In the courtyard of Zhou Qiwei, a famous scholar and poet in the early Qing Dynasty, wisteria was hard and scaly.