A couple of questions????

Discussion in 'How To Use Xenforo' started by Appleblossom31, Sep 20, 2020.

  1. Appleblossom31

    Appleblossom31 Gardener

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    Hi fellow gardeners

    Your advice is much needed. I Have 2 hydrangea, they have never looked fantastic after I planted them. They now look like pix( 1&2.) The petals withered almost immediately, but they have new growth now. Am I caring for these correctly? Any advise welcome.
    Next question, when is the best time of year to move plants from ground to pots?My pots near my front and back door are full of annuals, now Ive established some perennial I was thinking of saving money and using what I already have and adding pots to area on pix 5. 16005885501312627260234300271679.jpg 16005886040546502634667435373271.jpg 16005885501312627260234300271679.jpg 16005886343786754648485932055626.jpg 16005887129683497896671863130792.jpg 16005887518286372557824884923652.jpg So, I was thinking of dividing up a bleeding heart (pix 4) which has got big and potting some of it to go outside my back door, the plant (pix 4) and hydrangeas in pix (2). Would this be a good idea? If so when is the best time to do it.
    Many thanks for advice in advance.
     
  2. luis_pr

    luis_pr Gardener

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    Hello, Appleblossom31. Actually, at this moment, they look just fine to me. The leaves are dark green so there are no acidity issues so far. Then again, the plants' roots are mostly/still in the potting mix and have not ventured too much into the garden soil to be affected by soil pH differences. There is one recently opened (green) bloom and a slightly older one (pink); the other blooms are older and changing colors. There are broccoli heads in a few places, which is great! The blooms should fade and end up feeling papery and looking brown when the color changes end.

    The concern with the limestone is valid though. Some cemented surfaces and rocks will leach lime, which makes the soil more alkaline and hydrangeas will tolerate this up to a point. You can monitor soil acidity using a soil pH kit or by looking for signs of iron chlorosis on plant leaves. When they are uncomfortable with high alkaline soil pH levels, the leaves will turn light green/yellow/white except for the leaf veins... which will remain dark green. This is usually called iron chlorosis. At this point, it is best to acidify the soil with either aluminum sulfate, garden sulfur, greensand or iron-chelated liquids. The liquids correct these leaf symptoms slightly faster than granular amendments but liquids have to be re-applied more often; both are slow to darken the leaves to dark green (takes a few weeks). If you ever have to amend the soil, plan on doing that on a regular basis per label directions forever because, if you quit for a long enough time, the soil will revert back.

    The blooms should go through a plethora of color changes that varies from one type of hydrangea to another type; or from one variety of hydrangea to another variety. Just one example: the blooms may open pink; after sometime, the pink blooms start to turn green; then after sometime, they add some pink/red/purple splotches; then after some more time, the blooms turn sandy colors and end by browning.

    Typical requirements for hydrangea macrophyllas (macrophylla is the type of hydrangea in your pictures) - planting location: not windy, with either morning sun only (until 10-11am) or dappled sun; maintain the soil as evenly moist as you can; maintain 5-10cms of organic mulch (no rocks) around the shrubs at all times of the year; fertilize (organic compost, composted manure or cottonseed meal; or use a general purpose, slow release, chemical fertilizer with a NPK Ratio of around 10-10-10 once in the Spring) until they are well established and then let them feed off the decomposing mulch (provided your soil does not have mineral deficiencies like many sandy soils have); the soil should be well draining and acidic (but will tolerate some alkalinity); amend the soil regularly if the plants show signs of iron chlorosis; water the soil but never water the leaves in order to minimize the chances of getting leaf fungal infections. If you insert a finger into the soil to a depth of 10-20cms and the soil feels dry or almost dry then water the plant with enough water to get the soil moist down to a depth of 40cms. Hydrangea roots are tiny, shallow, fibrous and grow only down to a depth of approximately 10cms, so keep the top soil moist with mulch and be careful when walking around those plants' roots.

    Picture 1: one recently opened bloom on the left side; several tiny broccoli heads throughout (that is what the flower buds look like when they begin to open); one bloom still bright pink; the rest of the blooms are spent and doing their color change thing (should be turning brown "soon"). The leaves appear fine and dark green. Needs organic mulch (no rocks). The plant may be "too close" to bricks that leach lime. I could not see the stems due to the dense foliage.

    Picture 2: only one bright pink bloom still left, in the top center; most blooms are in the green color phase, maybe starting to turn a little sandy colors; some leaf damage but not sure why... maybe mechanical damage or insects/pests. This late in the season when the growing season is at a close, I would not worry much about that. Needs organic mulch (no rocks). I could not see the stems due to the dense foliage.

    Picture 3: same as picture 1

    Plants will be less stressed after a transplant when you move them while they are dormant or semi-dormant. Bleeding hearts can be moved in the fall after the plants go dormant. Choose the location based on how big/wide the plants can get and based on how big/wide nearby plants will get. Some hydrangea macrophyllas can get 1.5 meters wide or more; check the plant label of your hydrangeas for estimates of plant size at maturity. Bleeding hearts require loose soil for their tender roots to grow. Tilling the soil to a depth of 20-25cms and removing rocks, roots and other debris prepares the bed for growing bleeding hearts.

    All of my hydrangea blooms have already turned brown down here. The further south one is located, the earlier the blooms brown out here in the US. The macrophylla leaves will start to brown out and "disintegrate" in October-November, except for the oakleaf hydrangeas which usually start a very nice foliage show (reds, oranges, yellows, purples, browns) in November or December. Some of the oakleaf hydrangea leaves will disintegrate in December-January but, there are several oakleaf plants whose leaves nowadays will remain with those foliage colors until leaf out time in 2021. They did not use to do that; I am not sure if there is a micro-climate causing it or global warming or what.

    Does that help you, Appleblossom31?
    Luis
     
    • Informative Informative x 1
      Last edited: Sep 20, 2020
    • ricky101

      ricky101 Total Gardener

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      Hi,

      A comprehensive answer there from @luis_pr :dbgrtmb:

      Would just add this bit about our smaller Hydrangeas in that they do generally prefer some shade and do like plenty of water.
      From Gardeners World -
      Grow hydrangeas in a partially shaded, sheltered spot, in moist but well-drained soil. Prune mophead and lacecap varieties in spring and other varieties in summer. Mulch annually with well-rotted manure or compost.

      Re moving plants into pots, some can be moved early autumn when there is still time and warmth for the disturbed roots to make some new growth, but their pots might need some extra protection against any heavy frosts etc.

      We generally prefer to split perennials early spring when you can just make out the new shoots emerging, meaning they are in active growth and we find they develop very quickly.
      Always seems a bit hit and miss wondering if the Autumn divided ones have survived the winter.

      Not sure, but expect early Spring flowers like the Bleeding Heart will need doing now to ensure you have some blooms next Spring
       
    • ThePlantAssassin

      ThePlantAssassin Gardener

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      @Appleblossom31

      I hope you dont mind me asking as Im not actually being very helpful to your actual question.
      What is plant at the back corner of pic 5 that is a gorgeous shade of blue?
      I want want want one :smile:
       
    • Appleblossom31

      Appleblossom31 Gardener

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      Hi
      The plant is a clemetis I bought from aldi. Hope that helps you
       
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