Heucheras are my favorite plant to divide in zone 7. You could have easily split that plant into a dozen ore more plants. Each stalk or “trunk” can be cut away and all but 2-3 new leaves trimmed off... then just plant the trunk directly in the soil using the same principle discussed in the video (that trunk will essentially become a tap root). I divided 5 heucheras this way in September into over 100 plants, and I believe had a 100% take rate (all plants put out a few new leaves this fall). I expect them to take off in the spring and have large drifts of heuchera ground-cover in my shade garden.
I discovered this method by accident, the squirrels pushed dirt out of my planter of Heucheras. When I top dressed it, they came back very nicely because I was burying the root stalks higher with as much dirt as the container could hold. They do much better for me in planters in Ontario Canada. I’ll be doing your method in the early spring, we’ve got snow now. Great video Jenny, the clear as glass closeups are very much appreciated. 🇨🇦
Hi Jenny. I read same article! I had a rose with clematis in container that was just sad. Bumped up size of container and then put the compost in bottom half (it’s a big container) and man did it come back! It’s now leading it’s best life.
I'm so glad I found your video. At my old house, I had a beautiful garden that I planted and tended to alone. Surprisingly, I had no failures and the plants and 2 Japanese maples thrived. At my new house, the soil is awful and there are landscapers (there's an HOA so I can't tell them to not do my lawn). This is why I started using planters. During the summer, I searched for colorful plants that are safe for dogs and I came across Heuchera. I repotted them and they did really well. All of a sudden, a few weeks ago, they looked to be dying. A few days ago, I added more soil, miraclegro and moved them to a place with more sunlight. I'm hoping that they'll again do well. I had no idea that plants could push up out of the soil.
Thank you for this. I have several heucheras that had long stems. We had landscaping done and they had to be dug up. Before replanting, I amended the soil well and then just planted them deeper so that the stems were covered. I didn't know until watching your video that this was acceptable. Everything else I've seen talks about cutting the stems at the base and repotting/replanting. I didn't want to do that and start from scratch. Thanks, again; very helpful.
This was great! I have 2 large pots on my front porch that have a trio of heuchera in them. So this is very helpful when I need to repot them. I also have some in my landscape that pushed up so replanted them as you said and hopefully they will do much better. Thanks Jenny!
Thanks, Jenny! We can tell you’re an amazing Mama, teacher and gardener! So appreciate you talking through your process… and the multiple camera angles!!! We’re also in NC & I’ve now replaced soooo many annuals with heucura and need to keep them maintained. Merry CHRISTmas! 🎁🎄 🌟
Hi, Jenny I always enjoy to watch your show especially very nice to hear your voice when you are talking so pro so clear Crystal like music in my ear 👌👍♥️💋
I just planted a lemon love this Fall. Got two plants for the price of one by splitting them. I did that to several heuchera plants I purchased this year. They are the most easiest plant to do that with.
Oh my goodness! I have a heuchera that did that and I had no idea what was going on. Now I know I can replant it to take care of it. Thanks so much for doing this video❣️
I’ve had two of my Heucheras for over 20 years. Moving them around and actually moving them to a new house really helped as I was dividing them at the same time.
I agree. Much better luck with them growing in pots! I have one huge one but have lost others. This was a very helpful video Jenny, thank you and Merry Christmas!
Coral Bells are one of my favorite plants, I use them for the colors of leaves. I have so many colors. The one thing I find is don't over water them and here in Pennsylvania they love the shade.Thank you for your video.
As I watched this when Jenny put the Cora bell deep into the container I said out loud now we’re cooking with peanut oil it was like there was an echo when she said it!🌻
So glad you explained about the foliage over the winter, Jenny! I just planted some heucheras and had no idea what to expect! Also will know what to do if they heave! 😀😀
Thanks for this video. Knowing that all heucheras lift themselves out of the soil answers a bit question I had. I thought it was just mine. I am going to divide and replant mine more deeply today!
I have several, from 4 years to I don’t even know and just found out this year why they look so crummy. I went hard core on many of them and broke the individual trunks off and replanted. The ones in pots are the newer ones and I divided and placed fresh soil over the long stems/trunks. I noticed one of the trunks I potted looks great and is blooming! I live in the Pacific Northwest and they do grow fantastically easy here. No one wanted any so I ended up throwing some away and others still need more dividing and replanting. Thank you for this video since it shows what I should have done instead of (whoops) what I’d did.
Thank you for this video. I planted two huechacaras fin containers this past summer. I had no idea that I would ever have to replant them in their same container. I'm always learning with Creekside.
Great instructional for container huchera! I have quite a few in containers here in the northeast zone 6b that need this. I think, though, it's too late to do this. I will wait until early spring and just protect them over the winter.
Thank you Jenny for this great informative video. I’ll for sure will be incorporating Land and Sea in all my containers the start of planting season. Great info on the Heucheras as well as I’ve grown to love this pant for its great leaf varieties and colors! Now I know to replant them as they grow better for me in containers as well! 🥰👏🏻
So Glad I saw this! Was starting to blame the voles and moles again. I had given up on Hostas and have been having good success with the heucheras, but they have been looking a little sad, now i know why! I still have a problem with the little critters but not as bad as I had thought! live here in the piedmont NC
I had this same problem with heucheras in the ground in my Western Washington zone 7a garden. In late winter, I’d find many of them almost resting on top of the soil. I threw a few away before just trying to replant them-the latter worked well by adding some new planting mix and plantone in the hole. No more lost heucheras anymore!
Thanks Jenny! Great video - I will be putting this tip to good use in the spring. I went overboard with heuchera's this year (is that possible??? I had a rainbow of foliage all summer - gorgeous). I have seen this happen with my older plants and now I know what to do to help them look their best
Thanks for this video as my heucheras struggled this summer. I did transplant one at the end of summer and it is doing well. There's another that's still got a couple of leaves and apparently clinging to life, and I'm going to dig it up and put it in a container. I've had to reassess my shade garden this summer as the trees have really grown in the 6 years we've lived in this house and the roots are reaching further into my shade beds. I don't find my tiarellas have the "heaving" problem and they continue to spread, but not aggressively.
Jenny, great information and video; but what really caught my attention is that adorable birdhouse to your right (left of the screen). Do you sell those at the garden center? And if so, would you ship? So cute 🥰 .
I have the same issue with heuchera. I thought maybe it was our clay soil. They seem to do better for me in pots. It will be interesting to see how yours are doing in the spring. Thanks for the video!
I had never been able to grow heuchera either; when planted in containers, lo and behold they took off! I think the real issue is drainage. As soon as they are in a place that drains well they recover dramatically from the sad little things they were in the beds.
Actually, instead of 'real issue', I should say another major issue esp. with the clay soil. I'm in 7b, we get some heaving with cold temps but not a lot. I've replanted more than once and it didn't solve my problem. Containers with good free-draining soil did. That said, any plant will eventually outgrow it's space.
Just what I was looking for on caring for heucheras! Also....please tell me how you manage the areas of your property that are under the old growth Evergreen trees! I am in NW Oregon and struggle all year long with the mess they make below, especially after rain and winds! It is a constant fight against the mess, and we cannot afford to have them cut down. Thanks so much!
I'm in Colorado zone 5b. I have two heuchera colors, dark purple and lime green. The dark purple looked miserable in full sun. In light shade they're doing wonderfully, large and lush. The lime green were planted in full sun in pink rock in the south-east corner of the yard. They're big but the edges of their leaves are always burnt to a crisp. I didn't put them there. The landscaper put them there before I knew anything about gardening. Now I want to move the lime heucheras to the shady corner and put butterfly weed in their old spot. None of mine are in containers, but it's good to know that if I ever live in the south, containers are my heucheras' friends.
Many thanks for the great tip on caring for my heucheras. I'm anxious to give it a try. Can you also tell me the make of your garden wagon and where I can purchase one?
I have had trouble growing heuchera or heucherella in my sandy soil, zone 4b. One favorite variety I planted among my hosta garden was 'Sweet Tea' and I made the mistake of cutting off the scrappy foliage in the fall. Two of the three died and the survivor was puny. This year I replaced them, but neglected to water them during our exceptionally dry summer and they died. Third time's the charm? I mulched them with Land & Sea and left the foliage alone this fall. 🤞
Hi Jenny! I’m in NC with our good old red clay soil. These are one of my favorites. I do have them in the landscape. Can I dig them up amend the soil and replant them now? Or do I have to wait until spring? I would love to get a head start on them. I usually wait until spring. Which we all know is busy busy. Thanks for sharing.
This was a very helpful video! I’ve planted a few hookers this year, both in pots and in my garden. Is it possible to put the Land and Sea compost around the plant and scratch it in or does it have to be in the bottom of the pot? Thank you in advance!🥰
I know it's realy old video, ut i hope u will or anybody of u guys reply 😅😊i have a question! Does heuchera love moist or it's more dry shade? I live in Italy south of Rome, my, Heucheras has to be in shade otherwise they will not survive
They have moderate water needs. They don’t like to stay damp, and they seem to handle drier soil better in my garden. I typically have the best success when they are in containers as opposed to being directly in the ground. Hope this helps!
Jenny, I live near Charleston South Carolina. Would live to create an alleyway garden on the south side of my home. What plants could I use? I'm zone 8 to 9.
Question…and maybe I missed it. Why did you empty out the old soil and not just add to it? I’m guessing you want to add back good nutrients by adding new soil?
I asked myself that same question. I think it has to do with when you own your own garden center and have easy access to lots of purchased items it's just simpler. In in ground gardening you don't throw out soil so I would think w/the right know how potting soil can be revitalized w/amendments too.....I would guess some alfalfa meal and bone meal but she is already adding biotone so perhaps just alfalfa meal and maybe a little composted chicken manure or compost.
Will that pot stay out during the winter, and if so how do you help preventing it from cracking? I’m in zone 7 and that would probably crack in my area.
I'm new to gardening so could you explain to me why you're adding fertilizer going into winter, or is that just because the plant doesn't become fully dormant? I find all this stuff so confusing. 🤔
I used Bio-tone fertilizer which is a starter fertilizer which is specifically for healthy root growth. I always use Bio-tone when planting perennials, shrubs, and trees so that they grow a strong root system which will ensure a beautiful & healthy plant up top.
Heucheras are my favorite plant to divide in zone 7. You could have easily split that plant into a dozen ore more plants. Each stalk or “trunk” can be cut away and all but 2-3 new leaves trimmed off... then just plant the trunk directly in the soil using the same principle discussed in the video (that trunk will essentially become a tap root). I divided 5 heucheras this way in September into over 100 plants, and I believe had a 100% take rate (all plants put out a few new leaves this fall). I expect them to take off in the spring and have large drifts of heuchera ground-cover in my shade garden.
I'm in zone 5 and that's what I've found to be the case as well. 👍🏻
Thanks for letting me know! I was debating on my mind whether or not to go ahead and split it, but decided it to play it safe since I was filming it 😂
@@GardeningwithCreekside lol good call 😁 Rest assured though I'm pretty brutal ripping mine apart and they love it 😂😊
@@emptynestgardens9057 next time I will show no mercy 😉
Yes. I would have hacked this apart. Nice pot. (Zone 8 coastal NC)
I discovered this method by accident, the squirrels pushed dirt out of my planter of Heucheras. When I top dressed it, they came back very nicely because I was burying the root stalks higher with as much dirt as the container could hold. They do much better for me in planters in Ontario Canada. I’ll be doing your method in the early spring, we’ve got snow now. Great video Jenny, the clear as glass closeups are very much appreciated. 🇨🇦
Hi Jenny. I read same article! I had a rose with clematis in container that was just sad. Bumped up size of container and then put the compost in bottom half (it’s a big container) and man did it come back! It’s now leading it’s best life.
Yay!!!!!
I love Heucheras, and I really love that pot!
Yes, pulling it out and dividing it and repotting works! I’ve had excellent results with its survival! Thanks for the great lesson!
That planter looks so perfect with just green foliage in it!
I'm so glad I found your video. At my old house, I had a beautiful garden that I planted and tended to alone. Surprisingly, I had no failures and the plants and 2 Japanese maples thrived. At my new house, the soil is awful and there are landscapers (there's an HOA so I can't tell them to not do my lawn). This is why I started using planters. During the summer, I searched for colorful plants that are safe for dogs and I came across Heuchera. I repotted them and they did really well. All of a sudden, a few weeks ago, they looked to be dying. A few days ago, I added more soil, miraclegro and moved them to a place with more sunlight. I'm hoping that they'll again do well. I had no idea that plants could push up out of the soil.
Can't wait to see this...also Can't believe all the major projects you two take on!
Thank you for this. I have several heucheras that had long stems. We had landscaping done and they had to be dug up. Before replanting, I amended the soil well and then just planted them deeper so that the stems were covered. I didn't know until watching your video that this was acceptable. Everything else I've seen talks about cutting the stems at the base and repotting/replanting. I didn't want to do that and start from scratch. Thanks, again; very helpful.
This was great! I have 2 large pots on my front porch that have a trio of heuchera in them. So this is very helpful when I need to repot them. I also have some in my landscape that pushed up so replanted them as you said and hopefully they will do much better. Thanks Jenny!
Thanks, Jenny!
We can tell you’re an amazing Mama, teacher and gardener! So appreciate you talking through your process… and the multiple camera angles!!! We’re also in NC & I’ve now replaced soooo many annuals with heucura and need to keep them maintained.
Merry CHRISTmas! 🎁🎄 🌟
Thank you so much! Merry Christmas ♥️
I agree. Such a great teacher
Jenny thanks! Had no idea heurcheras lift makes total sense - great tip.
Thank you Jenny!!! I too have Heucura and have battled this issue! Now I know what to do thanks to you!!!! 🤗 Blessings!!!
Yay! Glad I was able to help!
Hi, Jenny I always enjoy to watch your show especially very nice to hear your voice when you are talking so pro so clear Crystal like music in my ear 👌👍♥️💋
I just planted a lemon love this Fall. Got two plants for the price of one by splitting them. I did that to several heuchera plants I purchased this year. They are the most easiest plant to do that with.
Thank you. I always wondered why they seemed to be trying to escape the garden beds.Haha😂
Thanks, Jenny! I had no idea about re-planting when those trunks get that big!✝️🇱🇷
Oh my goodness! I have a heuchera that did that and I had no idea what was going on. Now I know I can replant it to take care of it. Thanks so much for doing this video❣️
I’ve had two of my Heucheras for over 20 years. Moving them around and actually moving them to a new house really helped as I was dividing them at the same time.
Glad to hear this. Which variety?
@@rdarrett3635 That particular one is Green Spice. I have not seen it for sale for years.
@@SusanMiddleton1 I have that one! Oh my. I bought it two years ago. (Excited like a little kid.) ☺️
Yes, they love being moved and seperated.
Thank you so much Jenny! I love heucheras, but struggle with keeping them going....now I can try this and hopefully they will thrive!
A follow up video I look forward too! Thanks. Enjoyed this
Fascinating! I planted 4 of the dark purple ones this year. Thank you for teaching me about them!!!!!!
I agree. Much better luck with them growing in pots! I have one huge one but have lost others. This was a very helpful video Jenny, thank you and Merry Christmas!
So glad! Merry Christmas 💚♥️
Thank you for sharing your knowledge Jenny, forever thankful I found you ♥️
I use old large plastic soil bags for hot messes. I lay them down and work on top of them. I also sit on them in damp dirt.
Coral Bells are one of my favorite plants, I use them for the colors of leaves. I have so many colors. The one thing I find is don't over water them and here in Pennsylvania they love the shade.Thank you for your video.
As I watched this when Jenny put the Cora bell deep into the container I said out loud now we’re cooking with peanut oil it was like there was an echo when she said it!🌻
Great it must be happier now. Thank you so very much for sharing.🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦
Great tip about the water bottles
So glad you explained about the foliage over the winter, Jenny! I just planted some heucheras and had no idea what to expect! Also will know what to do if they heave! 😀😀
Thanks for the tips!! I'll def add compost to the bottom of my pot.
Thanks for this video. Knowing that all heucheras lift themselves out of the soil answers a bit question I had. I thought it was just mine. I am going to divide and replant mine more deeply today!
I have several, from 4 years to I don’t even know and just found out this year why they look so crummy. I went hard core on many of them and broke the individual trunks off and replanted. The ones in pots are the newer ones and I divided and placed fresh soil over the long stems/trunks. I noticed one of the trunks I potted looks great and is blooming! I live in the Pacific Northwest and they do grow fantastically easy here. No one wanted any so I ended up throwing some away and others still need more dividing and replanting.
Thank you for this video since it shows what I should have done instead of (whoops) what I’d did.
Thank you so much for this information. You are such a great source for all my gardening questions. Have a happy week.
This was very helpful information and your demonstrations are so helpful.
Fantastic! Glad it was helpful 🤗
Thank you for this video. I planted two huechacaras fin containers this past summer. I had no idea that I would ever have to replant them in their same container. I'm always learning with Creekside.
Great instructional for container huchera! I have quite a few in containers here in the northeast zone 6b that need this. I think, though, it's too late to do this. I will wait until early spring and just protect them over the winter.
Heucheras are one of my favourites Jenny xx
Loving that garden knife though!
I will be trying those in the spring thank you Jenny!
Thank you Jenny for this great informative video. I’ll for sure will be incorporating Land and Sea in all my containers the start of planting season. Great info on the Heucheras as well as I’ve grown to love this pant for its great leaf varieties and colors! Now I know to replant them as they grow better for me in containers as well! 🥰👏🏻
So Glad I saw this! Was starting to blame the voles and moles again. I had given up on Hostas and have been having good success with the heucheras, but they have been looking a little sad, now i know why! I still have a problem with the little critters but not as bad as I had thought! live here in the piedmont NC
I ❤ heucheras‼Hellebores, heucheras & hydrangeas are all my favorites! Now I know why I lost 3 of mine.
I had this same problem with heucheras in the ground in my Western Washington zone 7a garden. In late winter, I’d find many of them almost resting on top of the soil. I threw a few away before just trying to replant them-the latter worked well by adding some new planting mix and plantone in the hole. No more lost heucheras anymore!
Thanks!
Another good one, Jenny!
Thanks!
Great video Jenny. I love the pot 😍
Thanks!
Thanks Jenny! Great video - I will be putting this tip to good use in the spring. I went overboard with heuchera's this year (is that possible??? I had a rainbow of foliage all summer - gorgeous). I have seen this happen with my older plants and now I know what to do to help them look their best
I may get a pretty pot & plant a heuchera in it next spring here in Tennessee.🌱
Thanks for showing me how to care for it!🐞🥰👋🏼
I am going to try some of these next year.
Thanks for this video as my heucheras struggled this summer. I did transplant one at the end of summer and it is doing well. There's another that's still got a couple of leaves and apparently clinging to life, and I'm going to dig it up and put it in a container. I've had to reassess my shade garden this summer as the trees have really grown in the 6 years we've lived in this house and the roots are reaching further into my shade beds. I don't find my tiarellas have the "heaving" problem and they continue to spread, but not aggressively.
Thank u sooo much! Very helpful
Thanks Jenny! I do mostly container gardening here in N GA!
Jenny, great information and video; but what really caught my attention is that adorable birdhouse to your right (left of the screen). Do you sell those at the garden center? And if so, would you ship? So cute 🥰 .
Nice video sharing friend
Your video is amazing, waiting for the next video
I have the same issue with heuchera. I thought maybe it was our clay soil. They seem to do better for me in pots. It will be interesting to see how yours are doing in the spring. Thanks for the video!
I had never been able to grow heuchera either; when planted in containers, lo and behold they took off! I think the real issue is drainage. As soon as they are in a place that drains well they recover dramatically from the sad little things they were in the beds.
Actually, instead of 'real issue', I should say another major issue esp. with the clay soil. I'm in 7b, we get some heaving with cold temps but not a lot. I've replanted more than once and it didn't solve my problem. Containers with good free-draining soil did. That said, any plant will eventually outgrow it's space.
O.k. I am going to give it a shot !!!
Great information! I’ll try this next spring ☺️
Very helpful information!
Nice information 👌👌
Just what I was looking for on caring for heucheras! Also....please tell me how you manage the areas of your property that are under the old growth Evergreen trees! I am in NW Oregon and struggle all year long with the mess they make below, especially after rain and winds! It is a constant fight against the mess, and we cannot afford to have them cut down. Thanks so much!
I'm in Colorado zone 5b. I have two heuchera colors, dark purple and lime green. The dark purple looked miserable in full sun. In light shade they're doing wonderfully, large and lush. The lime green were planted in full sun in pink rock in the south-east corner of the yard. They're big but the edges of their leaves are always burnt to a crisp. I didn't put them there. The landscaper put them there before I knew anything about gardening. Now I want to move the lime heucheras to the shady corner and put butterfly weed in their old spot. None of mine are in containers, but it's good to know that if I ever live in the south, containers are my heucheras' friends.
One of my favorite plants. Iv wanted to put a few in pots but wasn’t sure how long I could keep them in there.
Thank you so much
Many thanks for the great tip on caring for my heucheras. I'm anxious to give it a try. Can you also tell me the make of your garden wagon and where I can purchase one?
Do you ever use window screen cloth to cover the hole in your planters?
Jenny, that's exactly what's happening to my huecheras. Hurray! cgzone8
Good to know!! I love that planter to!! What is that tree in the blue planter called?? I love it!! 💕💕🌸
I have had trouble growing heuchera or heucherella in my sandy soil, zone 4b. One favorite variety I planted among my hosta garden was 'Sweet Tea' and I made the mistake of cutting off the scrappy foliage in the fall. Two of the three died and the survivor was puny. This year I replaced them, but neglected to water them during our exceptionally dry summer and they died. Third time's the charm? I mulched them with Land & Sea and left the foliage alone this fall. 🤞
I love that pot!!! Where can I get one??
Would love some ideas for plants for year round pots in the south. Evergreens, small shrubs etc.
My husband thought of the perfect name for Heucheras "the Suicide Plant", because it throws itself out of the soil. :)
😂😂😂😂
I wondered why they were dying off. I buy them every spring. Now if you can help me with my Lenten rose?
I am78 years old and digging up my heucheras is quite a chore for me. Would I be able to just add compost to the tops?
Hi Jenny! I’m in NC with our good old red clay soil. These are one of my favorites. I do have them in the landscape. Can I dig them up amend the soil and replant them now? Or do I have to wait until spring? I would love to get a head start on them. I usually wait until spring. Which we all know is busy busy. Thanks for sharing.
This was a very helpful video! I’ve planted a few hookers this year, both in pots and in my garden. Is it possible to put the Land and Sea compost around the plant and scratch it in or does it have to be in the bottom of the pot? Thank you in advance!🥰
I tried to plant hookers too once, never sprouted. I never gave much of a f*** and neither did it unfortunately
What brand of Hori Hori knife do you use? I am a beginning gardener and need to buy some tools.
Ginny - where did you purchase your tool (hori hori) from?
Do you have a link for that hori hori knife?
What time of year is best to separate the plants.❓️❓️❓️❓️❓️❓️
I know it's realy old video, ut i hope u will or anybody of u guys reply 😅😊i have a question! Does heuchera love moist or it's more dry shade? I live in Italy south of Rome, my, Heucheras has to be in shade otherwise they will not survive
They have moderate water needs. They don’t like to stay damp, and they seem to handle drier soil better in my garden. I typically have the best success when they are in containers as opposed to being directly in the ground. Hope this helps!
Jenny, I live near Charleston South Carolina. Would live to create an alleyway garden on the south side of my home. What plants could I use? I'm zone 8 to 9.
I have much better success planting Heuchera in containers too. I’m also mildly obsessed with my Hori Hori knife 😊
I really need to get one.
In the Landscspe can you just add soil on top?
🤔I watched a video this past week. I can’t remember who’s video it was. They took their knife to divide their Heuchera into different plants.
I’ve had my heucheras in a coco liner all summer. Would it be better on the roots to transplant to a planter now?
It would. That way their roots are more protected & insulated during the winter.
Question…and maybe I missed it. Why did you empty out the old soil and not just add to it? I’m guessing you want to add back good nutrients by adding new soil?
I asked myself that same question. I think it has to do with when you own your own garden center and have easy access to lots of purchased items it's just simpler. In in ground gardening you don't throw out soil so I would think w/the right know how potting soil can be revitalized w/amendments too.....I would guess some alfalfa meal and bone meal but she is already adding biotone so perhaps just alfalfa meal and maybe a little composted chicken manure or compost.
Will that pot stay out during the winter, and if so how do you help preventing it from cracking? I’m in zone 7 and that would probably crack in my area.
It has sat there for 4 years and done great! No crack in sight & I don’t do anything special to it.
How often do you change the soil in your containers ?
Every year
Heuchera 🥀Ou "Le Désespoir Du Peintre" 😉🥀
Hi Jenny, just wondering if it would be good to use compost in the bottom of indoor plant pots or should compost be used strictly outside?
You can use this method in both indoor & outdoor plantings 😊
What is that tree in the blue pot next to you? How long can it live in a pot?
It is a Dwarf Horstmann Blue Atlas Cedar
@@GardeningwithCreekside It's beautiful. 😍
I'm new to gardening so could you explain to me why you're adding fertilizer going into winter, or is that just because the plant doesn't become fully dormant? I find all this stuff so confusing. 🤔
I used Bio-tone fertilizer which is a starter fertilizer which is specifically for healthy root growth. I always use Bio-tone when planting perennials, shrubs, and trees so that they grow a strong root system which will ensure a beautiful & healthy plant up top.
@@GardeningwithCreekside Thank you, Jenny. That clears things up for me.
My primo wild rose are turning brown on leaves with just 3-4hours of sun… is this normal?
Where do you live/what zone are you? Is this morning sun or afternoon sun?
I thought you were going to divide it into smaller plants?
I would have broken it up and planted 3 contrasting colours in that pot.
I have given up on them. I have NO luck at all with them......here in Virginia.
Can they be divided?
yes
I did not know that land and sea has worms in it..😁
👋😃