Bailey Nurseries
29.07.2024 - 17:19 / balconygardenweb.com / Ralph Astley
Deadheading your hydrangea blooms can help your plant use its energy to produce more flowers and new growth. This is why it is essential to know how to do it the right way, which is what this article is about.
Timing is important when deadheading hydrangeas and the best time to remove spent blooms is immediately after any of the flower clusters have faded. This allows your plant to redirect its energy towards developing new buds for the following year.
A common misconception is that you should do the deadheading in late winter or early spring, which is incorrect. It should be done regularly as and when you spot the fading flowers but according to the type of your hydrangea and climate.
1. Deadheading can encourage repeat blooming throughout the season for reblooming hydrangea varieties like Panicle Hydrangea that produces flowers on new wood (the current year’s growth). However, it’s vital to stop deadheading by early-september to allow the plant to prepare for winter.
2. On the other hand, if you have non-reblooming types like Hydrangea macrophylla that bloom on old wood (last year’s growth), deadheading can be done any time but should be stopped after late summer when the flowers start fading, this will ensure that next year’s buds remain intact.
Before you start to deadhead hydrangeas, keep a pair of garden gloves and clean pruning shears handy. You can also carry a container to hold the faded blooms.
To deadhead, carefully snip off the spent flower about half an inch above the first set of large leaves with new buds forming. Make an angled cut to facilitate water runoff and minimize the risk of rot. Remove the faded blooms very carefully to preserve the developing buds for next season’s stunning display if you’re
A conversation with Sarah Price about how she designs her planting schemes is fascinating. She works in an unfettered way, with no specific planting plans but an intuitive sense of the plants that will work well together to form the nature-inspired compositions she is known for. Her gardens are like exquisite paintings, comprising layers of detail with a gentle succession of plants that provide interest for most of the year. This summer combination comes from Sarah’s own garden on the edge of Abergavenny. Here, she has created different areas and habitats, including a dry garden in the old walled kitchen garden.
If you’re a fan of the quintessential indoor-outdoor Western lifestyle that comes along with expansive floor-to-ceiling glass, a warm wash of natural light, breezeways that maximize airflow, and surrounding serene landscape, you can thank famed architect Cliff May. Regarded as the founding father of the iconic California ranch house, May’s work has been repeatedly published in Sunset since the 1930s. What made his work stand out at the time was how he designed homes not so much based on architecture but on the way people wanted to live in them. Making the most of the Western climate, his goal was to provide a closer relationship with nature through garden courtyards and blur the line between how we use interior and exterior spaces. May in turn created private sanctuaries where families could relax and enjoy a lifestyle of informal outdoor living. He invented the way most people want to live in the West, and his influence is felt throughout the region some 90 years later.
While most plants struggle to survive when it’s time for frost, these ones thrive! So, as you layer up in wool and fur and ready your fireplace, these plants shed their shyness and burst into the prettiest blooms in fall; some of these even continue their show in winter! We present to you the best cool-season flowers that love chilly weather. Dig in!
It’s August already, and the holiday season is just around the corner! If you want your Christmas cactus to bloom extra pretty during the festive season, now’s the time to act. As summer peaks, this is the prime time to coax your cactus into producing more flowers. Here’s what you do!
Feeling stuck in a rut? We have selected the best plants with warm tones for your window boxes, they are not only perfect for fall but all growing season. These plants will instantly boost your mood and breathe life into the gloomiest bits of your home. Deck up your patio, balcony, porch, or even living room with these sunny plants!
Maybe you want to grow zinnias from seeds for volume, cuttings for cloning your favorite pick, or division for your container garden! Whatever your reason, we list down the choicest ways to propagate zinnias!
Over the past few years, Pamela Anderson has had more time to contemplate life. That is, until things kicked into high gear again—but more on that later. At the start of the pandemic in 2020, she moved from France, sold her house in Malibu, and headed north to the small town on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, where she was born and raised. She hunkered down with her two grown sons, Brandon and Dylan. She bought her grandmother’s old motel, renovated it, and set up her parents there. A lifelong cook, she perfected her baking skills. She reclaimed and expanded her grandfather’s garden on the same land where she had run barefoot as a self-described wild child. It’s the site of both her greatest childhood joys and harrowing traumas, which she describes candidly in her 2023 autobiography, Love, Pamela, and Netflix documentary, Pamela, A Love Story. Almost poetically, for Pamela has journaled and written poetry her whole life, she has reclaimed her true self and her youthful creativity on the exact spot where they were born. When I had the chance to sit with her and talk over Zoom recently, our conversation quickly moved beyond her new cookbook, I Love You (due out in October), to all aspects of life—and her ability to find the deepest of meanings in even the tiniest of seeds.
When it comes to landscaping, hydrangeas and hostas are extraordinary partners! Both promise year-round beauty, and their shade-loving nature uses up every inch of the garden. So, are you ready to turn your dim spaces into an explosion of colors? Read on!
There’s nothing more discomforting than scratching or pricking yourself in dry weather with scraggly thorn-filled rose bushes. But they are so pretty—if only they were as manageable! They can be, with our tricks to growing less prickly and thorn-free roses in your garden. Read on to find out!
How to Grow Swiss Chard for Fall Harvests
How to Plant and Grow Swiss Chard Beta vulgaris subsp. vulgaris, (Cicla andFlavescens Groups)