How long for bare root bleeding heart to show above ground?
10 years ago
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- 10 years ago
- 10 years ago
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Bleeding Heart Question
Comments (2)Thank you for your response Ken. Sorry I wasn't clear about what I did when I shifted them. I lifted the original root "balls" (not tightly packed) out of the old pots and put them into new pots filled with Pro-Mix, then flushed the new pots in hopes of removing the remaining salts or whatever. When I was devising my plan, I did worry about too much moisture and too large of pots, so I downsized the new pots a bit. The old pots and media are sitting out in the hoop house while I debate whether it's safer to dump the potting mix in the garden or in the alley. I'm thinking the alley, lol. It's interesting that Bleeding Hearts come up late in your area. One of the main causes of failure in Cheyenne (6,000'+) is they come up way too early (maybe April or so) and get hit with fairly hard frosts, often through the middle of May, sometimes through the first of June. Mine are on the north side of the house and don't wake up nearly as early as some people's do. Even so, they get flattened every few years. Our nighttime temps aren't reliably above 50 degrees until July or August (though the day temps do average 80-ish then), which is why I was wondering if I might need to give the seedlings a chilling. I do like to winter sow many of the perennials I want for my own yard. Much less work! For our spring plant sale, though, I start a variety of perennials in the fall or winter. The foliage tends to stay pretty low. I'm supposing it doesn't get leggy in the short winter days (no supplemental light for these guys) because the temps are low, too. The roots, on the other hand, seem to grow really well. Potting things up as the roots start showing out the bottom (not on stuff like Mirabilis multiflora or Callirhoe involucrata - yeesh!) keeps me busy. If we get any warmth in April, the foliage usually catches up to the roots in time for the sale. Oh, nope, no extra seed. I collected it in 2011 or 2012 and promptly forgot about it. I didn't have much hope they'd even come up, and figured I had nothing to lose :) Depending on the weather, my projects are either in the east-facing patio we enclose in the winter (sun from the north, east and some south) or in the west-facing sun room (sun from the south, west and north). When it's 20-something below zero at night, the patio is 20-something below, too, lol. The coldest I've seen the sun room this year was 7 degrees above zero. I bring things like geranium and dahlia seedlings in pretty much every night. The hardier perennials may or may not come in if the weather is supposed to be mild. So, long story short :), it sounds like if we ever get some warmer weather, the Bleeding Hearts might wake up and get back to growing :) Thanks again!...See MoreBare root trees, sodden ground -- advice, please?
Comments (14)pam ... let me sum it up for you .... YOU DONT KNOW WHAT COLD IS .... lol it was 48F yesterday .... and last night down to 7F with a 25 mph wind.. -15F wind chill ... ground thawing one day ... enough to let the 6 inches of snow disappear .. no clay here ... and the ground frozen solid today ... QUIT worrying about dormant plants being.. what you call cold ... until you get below zero .. which most likely wont happen in z8 .. and if it does... YOU WILL HAVE A LOT OF OTHER PROBLEMS TO WORRY ABOUT .... other than your darn trees... lol ... 78 of 80 .. good work ... and perhaps it didnt register ... but forget about a couple hot days.. this time of year .... ambient AIR temp is not relevent .... its SOIL TEMP .... worry about a week long heat wave.. but a couple days ... most likely isn't going to warm the soil significantly .... as noted .... the wetter and colder the better .. subject to your hands aching from being too cold .... in spring.. if the soil is workable... and soil freezing is past .... its time to plant .... for me .. that is april in z5 .... i will still get frosts thru late may ... and maybe even a snow in april .... but the ground will not refreeze .. so again ... ambient air temp is not an issue with dormant trees .... a very hard late frost can be a problem .... but it isnt worth worrying about ... IMHO .... all you have to worry about .... is that bare root stock gets into soil or medium ... they are NOT to be left standing in water for too long .... TIMING IS EVERYTHING .. and mail order sources mail them at the proper time ... the good ones do anyway .. lol ... just get it done... good luck ken...See MorePlanting a Bleeding heart
Comments (11)Ask away Eileen--that's what we're here for! 10 years ago, I was a newbie. One of the first gardening chores I had to do was divide the beautiful peonies that came with the house. Heart in throat and gardening book in hand, along with advice from my next door neighbor to wait until fall, I went out on a fine October weekend and spent all day digging up, separating, and replanting peonies in a sunnier spot. I was the happiest camper in God's green valley when, the next spring, they sprouted and actually bloomed! I was jumping around in my driveway saying "I didn't kill them! I didn't kill them!" I'm sure all of us have similar stories about our early days in the garden....See MoreBleeding Heart emergence
Comments (19)Just jumping in to conversation. Love the bleeding hearts and I too live in zone 5a, Illinois. 50 miles SW of Chicago. I am finding I really love the Dicentra Alba ( white) and the Gold Heart. Mine are up about 10-12"....See More- 10 years ago
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