Only early November? What zone are you in? Here in Chicago Zone 5 we leave the dried blooms up for winter interest. Then prune these in early spring before the buds start swelling. Shouldn't those water sprouts, or suckers (the one long stem that goes all the way to the top) be cut down to the base as well?
I’m having a problem with my plant staying up. The stems are too soft and any rain just drops them. How do I get the stems to harden up?The flowers are just too heavy for the stem support
This is exactly what I needed. Thank you!
Great video, just what I was looking for ! THANKS!
just one thing-- you should prune in late winter or early spring-- not in November.
Only early November? What zone are you in? Here in Chicago Zone 5 we leave the dried blooms up for winter interest. Then prune these in early spring before the buds start swelling. Shouldn't those water sprouts, or suckers (the one long stem that goes all the way to the top) be cut down to the base as well?
My question also. I’m so confused. Some say cut in spring, others fall. Which is it?
Kim Gnagy just dead head it in the spring you can do it in fall too but snow on the dried flowers provides winter interest
I tried this last year, but we get too much wind and snow, which destroyed the “winter interest.”
I’m having a problem with my plant staying up. The stems are too soft and any rain just drops them. How do I get the stems to harden up?The flowers are just too heavy for the stem support
Why do you leave one taller than the rest
Thank you
Does the hydrangea grow 7ft each each year?
thank you 😊
Audio too low.