Hydrangea plant pruning


When to prune hydrangeas for best bloom

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Hydrangeas are one of the most popular blooming woody shrubs in Minnesota landscapes and, as you’d expect, people often ask how and when to prune these beloved shrubs.

Heading cuts redirect growth or shorten small branches. The high point of a heading cut should be about 1/4" above a bud.

Hydrangea paniculata, panicle hydrangea

Prune back stems to just above a fat bud — called a heading cut — in fall, late winter or spring. These plants have conical-shaped flower heads. I recommend leaving the dry, tan flower heads on the plant to provide some winter interest in your landscape, so I wait to prune these until late winter or spring. Some favorite panicle hydrangeas:

Hydrangea macrophylla, big leaf hydrangea This original Endless Summer inspired a large series of other H. macrophylla developed by Bailey Nurseries.

These plants produce buds in late summer to early fall (August-September) that will form next year’s flowers. So prune these shrubs after they finish blooming before August (again, make a heading cut).

An exception is the Endless Summer® The Original Bigleaf Hydrangea (H. macrophylla 'Bailmer' PP15,298) and other cultivars in the Endless Summer series from Bailey Nurseries such as Blushing Bride, BloomStruck® , Summer Crush®, and Twist ‘n’ Shout®.

The H. macrophylla bloom on last year’s wood and new wood that grows this year. So it will bloom whether you prune it or not. Protect H. macrophylla in winter from rabbit browsing on the stems with a large, 4-foot tall ring of hardware cloth.

The Endless Summer hydrangea made a huge splash on the Minnesota landscape plant scene because of its pink to blue color flowers (achievable with proper soil amendment) and because it blooms on old and new wood.

Hydrangea arborescens, smooth hydrangea

Let these plants grow a season or two before doing any serious "hard" pruning. Once the shrub is established and has a couple of growing seasons under its belt, prune these hydrangeas in the spring down to the ground, or not at all if you want a larger shrub. Flower buds will grow on this season’s growth or new wood.

Some favorite smooth hydrangeas: 

Hydrangea petolaris or climbing hydrangea

This tough, gnarly vine needs little to no pruning ever, except for removing any dead wood that develops.

Plant this vine in full sun on a solid trellis or fence where you want a long-living, dense screen. It is a dickens to get rid of once it gets established.

Hydrangea paniculata ‘Limelight’ Quick Fire® hydrangea. Notice the wall color matches the late summer bloom color. This was intentional! Annabelle, a tried-and-true fixture in Minnesota landscapes

Author: Julie Weisenhorn, Extension educator, horticulture

Reviewed by Debbie Lonnee, Product Development Manager, Bailey Nurseries.

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How to prune hydrangeas: to keep them healthy and flowering

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Popular flowering shrubs, we must learn how to prune hydrangeas correctly to get the best from them, maximize blooms and to ensure that they can survive through winter.  

Hydrangeas make a great statement piece in a bed, border or in containers. They put on a spectacular display of flowers in the summer, and then die back in winter. Tolerant of a wide range of soil and light conditions, apart from a little pruning, hydrangeas require almost no maintenance. 

While learning how to grow hydrangeas is relatively simple – make sure you know when to plant hydrangeas and when to prune hydrangeas too – they can be disappointing over time if they are not correctly maintained through pruning and deadheading. Luckily, this is an easy skill to learn.

They range in color from white to pink, pale blue to deep purple. Their large, clustered flower heads, made up of lots of smaller flowers, make them a highly attractive and decorative plant, and there are many choices for what to plant with hydrangeas. Some of the flower heads are also wonderful for enduring floral displays indoors if you learn how to dry flowers. 

The way that you prune your hydrangea will depend on the variety that you have. Here we will look at the different types and how to prune them hydrangeas.

How to prune hydrangeas – for beginners

(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)

Hydrangeas are generally pretty low maintenance shrubs, and among the best flowering shrubs. Once you have identified the variety that you have in your garden, it's easy to get to grips with how to prune hydrangeas. 

Some of these fast growing shrubs flower on old wood and some on new wood, so it is important to prune them the correct way so as to not detrimentally affect their flowering. 

'Pruning hydrangeas will help the formation of new flowers and promote good shape,' explains Ian Wright, garden consultant at National Trust , which boasts dramatic displays of hydrangeas in many of its gardens as flower bed ideas.

(Image credit: Future)

Pruning mophead hydrangeas and lacecaps

(Image credit: National Trust)

The method for pruning mophead hydrangeas and lacecap hydrangeas (Hydrangea macrophylla)  – also known as bigleaf hydrangeas – is the same.

Mophead hydrangeas are a common choice for gardens with their full, roundish heads of large petals in shades of blue, pink, green and white. This makes them a popular shrub choice for cottage garden ideas and they also make good shrubs for shade.

Lacecap hydrangeas are identified by tiny flowers in the center of the bloom and an outer border of larger petals.

These varieties should be pruned in late winter or early spring. 

As a way to winterize hydrangeas, 'it’s best to leave the faded blooms in place over the winter to protect tender new buds from frost damage,' advise the experts at Thompson & Morgan

When pruning mophead hydrangeas and lacecaps in early spring:

How to prune climbing hydrangeas

(Image credit: Getty Images/ Catherine McQueen)

Climbing hydrangeas, such as Hydrangea anomola subsp. petiolaris, Hydrangea seemannii or H. serratifolia are pruned in summer, after flowering.

The reason that climbing hydrangeas are pruned in summer is because the flowers are produced on the previous year's wood. If they are pruned earlier in spring, before flowering, the blooms for that year will be sacrificed. 

'Prune Hydrangea petiolaris immediately after flowering to shorten any branches growing out from the wall or support, otherwise only light pruning is required to remove dead or damaged stems,' advises gardening expert Sarah Raven .

Most flowers appear at the top of these flowing climbers, so the RHS advise to leave as much of this unpruned as possible.

How to prune Hydrangea paniculata and Hydrangea arborescens

(Image credit: Annaick Guitteny)

Hydrangea Paniculata with its cone-like heads of blooms, and Hydrangea aborescens with its spherical flower heads, are also pruned in early spring.

Other types of hydrangea, including Hydrangea aspera and Hydrangea quercifolia, need only light pruning in spring. Simply remove dead flower heads and overlong or crossing stems.

(Image credit: Stephanie Klepacki / Unsplash)

What happens if you don't prune hydrangeas?

If you don't prune hydrangeas then they can eventually resemble a tangled mass of woody stems, and the flowers will become smaller and less showy. If your hydrangeas are not blooming, lack of pruning is often a reason.

Regular pruning of hydrangeas helps to maintain their shape and also encourages new growth and a better display of blooms. 

'It's this strong, new growth that ensures you have lots of large, healthy flowers to enjoy in the years to come,' explain the experts at Thompson & Morgan.

(Image credit: National Trust)

Do you cut off dead hydrangea blooms?

Deadheading hydrangeas – or removing spent flowers from the stem to encourage better blooming later on – can be done with some hydrangeas but not all.

The RHS recommends that dead blooms should only be removed from mophead hydrangeas after flowering in mild areas. Their advice is that it is better to leave the flowerheads on the plant over winter to provide some frost protection. 

In addition, by leaving the dried flowers on the plant, they will provide interest in the garden through to spring, and can be a stunning sight when covered in a coating of frost.

The flowers on the hardier lacecaps, however, can be deadheaded after flowering.

How far back should you prune hydrangeas?

Hydrangea macrophyllaHydrangea serrata, Hydrangea quercifolia, and Hydrangea aspera can be cut back, in spring, as far as the first pair of buds. You are essentially removing the dead flower heads. You can also open the plant up a little and improve its shape by cutting back one or two of the oldest, largest stems. Cut these back right to the ground to encourage new growth. 

Hydrangea aborescens and Hydrangea paniculata produce flowers on new growth and can therefore be cut back harder after flowering. You don’t actually need to prune these varieties, but you can do it to keep them from getting too tall. 

(Image credit: John Swithinbank)

What is the best way to prune hydrangeas?

The best way to prune hydrangeas, as with all pruning, should be carried out with a sharp, clean pair of gardening tools. This is to create a clean cut that is less prone to infection. The way that you prune your hydrangea will depend on the variety that you have, and to some extent the condition of the plant. 

If you find that your way of pruning is not yielding good blooms or a healthy plant, you may want to change your approach. Observe your plant through spring and summer to determine where it flowers from, old or new growth. Then prune according to this guide. 

This feature was created by H&G sister brand, Period Living magazine

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Period Living is the UK's best-selling period homes magazine. A subscription provides you with all you need to know about caring for and improving a traditional house and garden

Rachel is senior content editor, and writes and commissions gardening content for homesandgardens.com, Homes & Gardens magazine, and its sister titles Period Living Magazine and Country Homes & Interiors. She has written for lifestyle magazines for many years, with a particular focus on gardening, historic houses and arts and crafts, but started out her journalism career in BBC radio, where she enjoyed reporting on and writing programme scripts for all manner of stories. Rachel then moved into regional lifestyle magazines, where the topics she wrote about, and people she interviewed, were as varied and eclectic as they were on radio. Always harboring a passion for homes and gardens, she jumped at the opportunity to work on The English Home and The English Garden magazines for a number of years, before joining the Period Living team, then the wider Homes & Gardens team, specializing in gardens.

Proper hydrangea pruning: the subtleties and nuances of

Lush and proud hydrangea, pleasing to the eye with its luxurious flowers, can decorate any garden. But in order for the bush to look aesthetic and attractive, it needs periodic pruning.

We will tell you when and how to do it, how spring pruning differs from autumn pruning, and how best to do this procedure in autumn.

Timing and types of hydrangea pruning

Hydrangea pruning is carried out both in spring and autumn. Spring is the time for cardinal haircuts and the formation of a bush. And at the end of the season, when nature falls asleep, and the plants are preparing for winter, there is no need to radically cut hydrangeas. Now it is important for us to thin out the bush and free it from diseased, dried and improperly growing shoots.

Autumn pruning is carried out late, usually after leaf fall, because in September the plant changes color and is as beautiful and charming as in summer.

There are several types of correct pruning for hydrangeas.

  1. Traditional annual pruning in order to obtain a stronger and more abundantly flowering plant.
  2. Formative pruning, which allows you to give the bush the desired configuration and optimally position the skeletal branches.
  3. Sanitary cleaning, which is the removal of old and damaged shoots, dry inflorescences.
  4. Finally, the rejuvenation of hydrangeas with cardinal pruning, which is carried out on aging or badly damaged bushes.

Features of autumn pruning of hydrangeas

Although the main part of the work takes place in the spring, pruning of hydrangeas in the autumn is also obligatory. It is needed in order to divide all the work on the formation and improvement of the plant into two periods. In this case, the hydrangea will endure the entire procedure safely.

When pruning hydrangeas in autumn, you need to pay attention to old, damaged branches, as well as those that grow inside the bush. They are removed, but young shoots are not touched in the fall. Also, shoots are cut almost to the ground, which for some reason were broken in the summer.

The air temperature during this period should be plus 5-10 degrees. For different regions, this is the beginning - the end of October.

The further north the region is located, the more gentle pruning of the plant should be in autumn, since hydrangea does not like severe frosts, and shortened branches will be less protected from cold temperatures. This is especially true of large-leaved hydrangea, which is thermophilic. The remaining species are considered relatively frost-resistant.

Important! It is not customary (especially in cold regions) to carry out autumn pruning of the plant for the first three years, since the seedling needs strength to withstand and survive the adverse winter conditions. During this period, only forced sanitary cleaning is done.

In the southern regions in autumn, you can act more decisively with the expectation of the next year. Experts believe that in warm climates, autumn pruning is even more preferable.

All varieties of hydrangeas have their own specifics for autumn pruning.

Peculiarities of hydrangea pruning by species

All varieties of hydrangeas have their own specifics of autumn pruning.

  1. Paniculata hydrangea. The shrub blooms on the shoots of the current year, so don't be afraid to accidentally cut off a branch with flower buds. In autumn, you need to remove flower stalks, cut off dry and lodging branches.
  2. Tree hydrangea. This species also blooms on the current year's shoots. The rules of the autumn haircut coincide with the pruning of the paniculate hydrangea. It is necessary to remove flower stalks, cut out dubious, broken and dry branches.

Let's dwell separately on pruning large-leaved hydrangea. The haircut of this beauty in the fall should be carried out carefully, remembering that she blooms on the shoots of last year. That is, right now we can accidentally cut off all the future beauty.

All the large-leaved hydrangea needs now is the removal of peduncles and unproductive branches. It is necessary to cut out all damaged and dry shoots, because in snowy winters they quickly break and injure the bush. If the branches grow inward or cross, they are also removed.

In northern regions, hydrangeas should be covered after pruning. How to do it right - we will tell in the following publications. In the meantime, we invite you to look at the hydrangeas in our assortment. Large-leaved, paniculate, tree-like, oak-leaved - the choice is very large! The seedlings are delivered in containers and are well tolerated by shipping. Article author: Oksana Artemenko0002 Share with friends:

HOW TO PUT IT CORRECTLY IN SPRING

The issue of pruning hydrangeas in spring never loses its relevance. We have collected all the useful tips and provided them with diagrams so that the process is correct and the result pleases all summer.

Hydrangea is one of the most beautiful and fairly easy-to-care shrubs. However, the question of the correct pruning of hydrangeas in the spring never leaves the top of the most discussed topics. The brevity of the terms also warms it up - pruning must be carried out before active sap flow, i.e. when the plant is just waking up. In the Urals, this time (depending on the weather) falls on March-April. If you are late, you need to wait for the leaves to appear, and then trim as carefully as possible.

Important! Pruning must be systematic. For some varieties of hydrangeas, it is shown throughout the season. For others, the size of the inflorescence depends on it (regularly cut off - the inflorescences will be large, let the bush thicken - wait for the flowers to grind). And for almost all varieties, it is shown to form a beautiful dense crown of a shrub.

There are three approaches to pruning that determine the timing and extent of flowering
  1. Short cut. We leave 2-3 kidneys. Thus, we achieve later flowering and the largest possible inflorescences.
  2. Medium cut. We leave 3-4-5 kidneys. Flowering occurs on time in accordance with the variety. In this case, the size of the flower brush will be large or medium, and flowering will be plentiful.
  3. Long cut. We remove from above from 3 to 5 internodes. We provide early flowering, an increase in the number of inflorescences with a decrease in their size.

All hydrangeas need pruning - both those that are planted in the ground and those that live in containers

General procedure for pruning hydrangeas

After a suitable day is chosen, we act according to the algorithm:

How much pruning does your hydrangea need?

What kind of pruning your hydrangea needs is determined by its type.

Examples of pruning different types of hydrangeas

  • Tree and paniculate hydrangeas bloom on the shoots of the current year. For tree hydrangea, the earliest dates (March) will be optimal, since it grows more slowly than paniculate, and it needs time to form young shoots. For paniculate hydrangea, pruning in April is suitable.
  • Large-leaved hydrangea blooms on last year's shoots. It should also be cut off in the early stages, but according to a special scheme - not like a tree. In addition, do not be too zealous: in large-leaved hydrangeas, only old dried inflorescences are removed, as well as weak shoots that have not endured the winter well.
  • Hydrangea pruning

    Hydrangea pruning

    1. Removal of spherical inflorescences.
    2. Removal of broken, dead ends of branches.
    3. Complete removal of old branches.
    4. Cutting of null shoots, incapable of flowering, which only take away strength from a flowering bush.

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