Hydrangeas

Gardening Tips for Hydrangea Care

Gardening Tips for Hydrangea Care
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  • Richard Franklin

Hydrangea Care Tips

  1. Water at a rate of 1 inch per week throughout the growing season. ...
  2. Add mulch underneath your hydrangeas to help keep the soil moist and cool. ...
  3. Apply fertilizer based on your specific hydrangeas. ...
  4. Protect against pests and disease by choosing cultivars with resistant traits.

  1. Should I cut off dead hydrangea blooms?
  2. Do Hydrangeas like sun or shade?
  3. Where is the best place to plant a hydrangea?
  4. When should you prune hydrangea bush?
  5. What happens if you don't deadhead hydrangeas?
  6. Do Hydrangeas need lots of water?
  7. What side of the house do you plant hydrangeas?
  8. Can hydrangeas take full shade?
  9. Can you plant hydrangeas next to House?
  10. Will hydrangeas grow back if cut down?
  11. How can I tell if my hydrangea blooms on old or new wood?

Should I cut off dead hydrangea blooms?

"Stop deadheading in the fall, when bigleaf hydrangeas produce their last flush of flowers, to enjoy the dried blooms throughout the winter," she says. "These can be removed to help produce healthy buds in the spring."

Do Hydrangeas like sun or shade?

In general, for most hydrangeas except the panicle types, plan to give hydrangeas both sun and shade. Morning sun with afternoon shade works beautifully in the South and warmer regions. In these zones, afternoon sun sizzles and can easily fry hydrangeas.

Where is the best place to plant a hydrangea?

Where to plant hydrangeas:

When should you prune hydrangea bush?

Trimming should be done immediately after flowering stops in summer, but no later than August 1. Do not prune in fall, winter, or spring or you could be cutting off new buds. Tip-pruning the branches as leaves emerge in spring can encourage multiple, smaller flower heads rather than fewer larger flower heads.

What happens if you don't deadhead hydrangeas?

No need to worry – this is simply a sign that it's time to remove the flowers, a process called deadheading. When you deadhead hydrangeas, you aren't harming the plants at all. Removing the spent blooms triggers flowering shrubs to stop producing seeds and instead put their energy toward root and foliage development.

Do Hydrangeas need lots of water?

Even though hydrangeas require more water than some other shrubs, they don't like to be over-watered. It is best to have moist soil and not wet soil. One reason hydrangeas get over-watered is when they wilt in the afternoon sun.

What side of the house do you plant hydrangeas?

It's recommended to plant Hydrangeas on the side of the house that receives adequate light and coolness. Prepare the soil at the left side if much sunlight comes through that side of the house for Hydrangeas. And it's not only hydrangeas that can live beside the house, other plants can as well.

Can hydrangeas take full shade?

These shrubs grow best in partial or full shade, with a little direct morning sun and a lot of indirect light, such as the filtered light found under a high-canopied leafy tree. Many varieties of hydrangea love this type of location.

Can you plant hydrangeas next to House?

Plant Your Hydrangeas

After choosing the location for a hydrangea in front of the house or in another spot in the front yard, get ready for planting. Hydrangeas do best when they are planted while dormant, so choose the early spring before the weather warms up or the fall after the temperatures start to cool.

Will hydrangeas grow back if cut down?

You can take a more relaxed attitude about pruning if you have hydrangeas that set flower buds on current season wood, like panicle and smooth hydrangeas. ... Even if you cut canes back to ground level during dormancy, the shrubs will grow back and produce blooms in spring.

How can I tell if my hydrangea blooms on old or new wood?

Old wood is quite simply, last year's wood. Hydrangeas that bloom on old wood set their flower buds in late summer on stalks that have been on the plant since the previous year. Hydrangeas that bloom on old wood include the mophead, bigleaf (macrophylla), lacecap and oakleaf varieties.

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