Hydrangeas are budding out

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Posted by Zootal on January 19, 2010, 4:25 pm
 
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I noticed today that my hydrangeas are budding out and starting to grow.
It's mid January, and we have had colder than usual weather, yet there they
go. And the tulips are pushing up through the ice and mud. I don't remember
them growing so early in previous years. Any hydrangea experts know when
they normally will start growing? I haven't even got around to pruning them
yet, didn't think they would bud out for another month or two.


Posted by Phisherman on January 19, 2010, 6:33 pm
 

On Tue, 19 Jan 2010 15:25:03 -0600, Zootal


Mine are too.  I no longer bury them in leaves in the fall, maybe
lazyness, and they have not bloom for many years.  I think the buds
freeze or get eaten by deer.   I still like the foliage, though.    My
hydrangea also got too big, nearly 6 feet across, 4 feet high.

Posted by Zootal on January 19, 2010, 7:09 pm
 



We had almost a week of sub 20 degree weather. I'm not sure if I'll get any
blooms or not. I didn't prune them or do anything at all, I just let them
sit. We don't usually get cold weather like this, so they usually survive
the winter just fine and bloom like crazy all year long.

Posted by madgardener on January 21, 2010, 1:53 am
 


if you don't want flowers on your hydrangea's then prune them. The
only way you can safely prune them and not sacrifice blossoms is to
prune them after they bloom in the late spring or early summer. not
sure where you're gardening, but here in my zone 7b climate, where
we've gotten sub-zero winds and single digit temperatures last week, I
too have seen buds on my variegated hydrangea. I'm not panicking. This
is planted on the NORTH side of my house, and the buds seem fine.
Another problem though that I see is my Korean Spice Viburnum has
bloomed one cluster of buds when I wasn't aware of it before the deep
freeze, as I found yesterday the remains of the partially opened bud
cluster. Rats.  It's planted in direct hard Eastern sunlight, which
gets good Southern exposure as well as indirect western light in the
front edge of the garden where we live now. I may move it before sap
rises to another spot in the front yard where it won't get so much
direct sunlight.  The main reason I planted it was specifically for
the highly fragrant flower clusters.  Give your hydrangea time to wow
you.  Hydrangea start seriously growing once true spring hits. For me,
it was in late March, mid April.  And if you MUST prune, at least wait
for the true leaves to show and the real dead portions of the plant to
reveal itself once the leaves are out.  If you go around your yard,
you'll see EVERYTHING has pre-Spring buds just waiting for the real
warmth to come and stay, not just false spring temperatures. Where are
you gardening? That also makes a difference.
madgardener seeing little green "tongues" of spring bulbs coming up as
well

Posted by Zootal on January 21, 2010, 12:48 pm
 



I've got tulips 2-3 inches tall. A few daffodils next to the house are
8" tall. My Lilacs have been budding since mid December. We had a week
of weather in the 50's. Now it's down to the 30's. Spring is around the
corner indeed, and Winter isn't even half over.

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