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Gardening

Find tips and tricks to make your garden or allotment flourish on our Gardening forum.

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Hydrangea issues

15 replies

CarcerDun · 13/04/2019 14:57

I have a well established hydrangea in my garden, we moved in a few years ago and am just getting to tackle it. It's lovely but underneath and around it there are thousands of bulb flowering plants. I have started digging them up to give the hydrangea some space but I'm wondering how much I am damaging the hydrangea. I can't leave them there as it looks a mess. How hardy will the hydrangea be?

OP posts:
greenelephantscarf · 13/04/2019 15:03

I would leave it well alone. just giving it a prune/deadhead and a shrub feed.
if you don't want the bulbs cut off their foliage and they will grow weaker and dissapear over time.

SwedishEdith · 13/04/2019 15:17

This post has been hidden until the MNHQ team can have a look at it.

Confused When did hydrangeas become controversial?

greenelephantscarf · 13/04/2019 15:19

what? since when is gardening advice controversial?
I didn't even swear!

Wauden · 13/04/2019 15:22

It might be best to leave the bulb plants alone, really. They can co-exist.
Curious about the deleted post!

CarcerDun · 13/04/2019 16:26

Wauden, the problem is that leaving the bulbs there looks really messy and is stopping me getting to the well established weeds that are also entrenched. Hmm I might try taking them out bit by bit and seeing how they go.

I am very intrigued at the deleted post! 🤣

OP posts:
CarcerDun · 13/04/2019 16:27

Greenelephant... 😲

OP posts:
greenelephantscarf · 13/04/2019 16:32

ah, now I know - I mentioned a pruning technique which sounds macabre to a computed algorythm...

a well. op give the hygraenga a shrub feet and prune it slightly. the bulbs I would leave tbh their foliage will dissapear short after flowering is over and the bush will take over.

greenelephantscarf · 13/04/2019 16:37

tbh I would just mulch a layer of compost and bark to make it look tidy.

CarcerDun · 13/04/2019 22:18

Love the malicious pruning element!

Thanks all, will continue to try and get them out whilst (tentatively) coping with the bulbs.

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LouMumsnet · 13/04/2019 22:41

Evening all.

Thanks for the report. We're really sorry - we've got no idea why @greenelephantscarf's post was hidden by our NightWatch team. We think it was an accidental case of fat fingers (rather than green fingers, which would be more appropriate on here).

We've reinstated it now for you so please do forgive us.

CarcerDun · 13/04/2019 23:22

Seriously MNHQ there is more agro in gardening then the rest of Mumsnet, so good call. Oh, wait.😉

P.s. do I win the most controversial thread in gardening ever????!

OP posts:
CarcerDun · 13/04/2019 23:29

Greenelephant that makes sense, I think then that the bulbs that are too ingrained I might just have to keep cutting down till they lose interest.
Thank you, although I am slightly disappointed by the lack of terrorist subterfuge in your original post 🤣

OP posts:
Wauden · 18/04/2019 22:40

So that's what the offending word was! Shock

ppeatfruit · 19/04/2019 12:17

It's nice to leave the plants under shrubs for the wild life, hedgehogs etc. they need to be able to move through undergrowth. They have managed to eat almost all the slugs and snails in my garden, so I keep the 'edges' for them. I feed them leftover cat food. Oh my hydrangeas are happy too.

Yes as greenelephant says put a mulch down and relax !!

Wauden · 19/04/2019 13:21

Deadhead.
There, I SAID IT.

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