Hydrangea Shrub won't produce Flowers
last year
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- last year
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have hydrangea that won't bloom. help please!
Comments (10)I have a Nikko Blue that blooms most summers. Last spring, I got a piece of advice from a local gardener that I think made a difference. I used to prune off whatever looked dead in April. He said to wait until June 1, because in our climate you can't tell what's dead until then. I followed his advice and had a Nikko full of blooms last summer. It gets morning sun. I just blow yard leaves over it to protect it in the fall. Yes, I KNOW that isn't really winter protection, but it's what I'm willing to do. I also have many other hydrangeas that will bloom, so if this one doesn't it isn't too upsetting. It does seem to be a diva. Other advice from my local gardener: Do not disturb the plants at all until May 1, then remove winter protection, dead leaves at the base and old flower heads. Once a week, feed with half strength Miracid until blooms start. Prune in June. Some of the old wood wakes up late. Do not remove dead flower heads in the fall. This helps the plant harden and protect itself for winter. When it's a good year for the fruit crops in your area, it's also a good year for hydrangeas. I'd follow this guy's advice for a year. Don't move the plant again. It's an added stress that might be hurting. If next summer, the fruit crops are good and you still don't have blooms, yank it and replace with something more reasonable. Just my 2cents. Now I'll step back and let the arguing begin :)...See MoreClimbing hydrangea won't bloom
Comments (42)Your description does sound like CH is doing what it is notorious for... waiting to bloom until it reaches the top of that which it is growing on. High phosphorus levels in other plants encourage blooming but I just do not know if the plant will respond like roses do for example. Epsom salts mostly contain magnesium and some Sulfur. By the way, I am not sure how well the small tendrils will do trying to climb limestone rocks in your garage. Maybe someone has already tried and can chime in....See MoreMy PeeGee Hydrangea won't bloom
Comments (7)jclay your hydrangeas are beautiful! I imagine you are both right, I need to use some compost. Luis, I had another hydrangea that someone gave me as a gift. It was pink, I planted it and it took 10 years for that one to bloom again. Now it's growing slowly but has lots of blooms. So perhaps my yard needs a major work-over! I am in zone 7a. Last winter had a couple of 20 degree days but not that many, and I don't remember any hard frosts in the spring. I don't believe deer are eating the blooms, the plant really looks great, other than no blooms, and I have never seen any buds. This shrub gets full sun from about 8am to 4 pm. I haven't tested my soil, but I am pretty sure I added absolutely nothing when I planted it. As a matter of fact, a few years after planting, I had to add more top soil because the roots were starting to show. That was about 6 years ago. I live in northern virginia, so I believe our soil is fairly acidic. Thanks so much for your help! Can anyone tell me how to add a pic to my post?...See MoreHydrangea Mystery? 1 Won't Bloom
Comments (2)I would get one of those soil kits that tests for too much nitrogen and determine if somehow you are accumulating too much fertilizer where that non-bloomer is located. Sometimes lawn fertilizer, combined with the hydrangea's fertilizer combine and become too much so you get no blooms. As we get into Spring 2012, I would check if the shrubs are developing any flower buds or if the flower buds are developed and then are being eaten. So observe if pests like to congregate there... pests like deer, squirrels, etc congregate. They could be eating all of your flower buds. However, I would expect them to also munch on the other two NB. So I am not sure if this is THE cause but it is worth checking anyways. If you are not getting any flower buds then you may have an environmental problem. It is too cold and the buds dry out, for example. Or it is too dry during the Fall and-or Winter and the plant aborts the flower buds. NB should be hardy on your zone 6 so I would check if this one gets less water.... say because the sprinkler waters the other two fine but does not reach well enough to this one NB. Dense shade can be a problem too but if all three were in dense shade, I would expect them all to be affected. Just wondering, have you ever had a formal soil test done?...See MoreRelated Professionals
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