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Beginner Flowers: Wilting Hydrangea

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Forum: Beginner FlowersReplies: 4, Views: 90
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dundeelaw
Litchfield, IL

June 15, 2009
11:36 AM

Post #6690289

I have a hydrangea bush in front of my house that is just over one year old. I find that if I don't water it almost every day with two buckets of water then it wilts. What can I do? Do I need to adjust the soil around the plant? Here is a photo of it (after it was watered for the day). Thank you for your help!

Thumbnail by dundeelaw
Click the image for an enlarged view.

ecrane3
Dublin, CA
(Zone 9a)

June 15, 2009
02:01 PM

Post #6691028

How much sun is it getting? Hydrangeas are thirsty plants anyway, but they'll be worse the more sun they're getting. So if you're finding you don't like the frequency you're having to water it, you might consider moving it to somewhere that gets more shade.
dundeelaw
Litchfield, IL

June 15, 2009
06:05 PM

Post #6692156

It gets morning sun only. Maybe that's even too much? I don't know. Thank you for your helpful post.
ecrane3
Dublin, CA
(Zone 9a)

June 15, 2009
07:49 PM

Post #6692625

It should be fine with morning sun. Instead of watering it as soon as you see it wilting, you might wait and see if it perks up again when the sun's not on it anymore, sometimes plants will wilt as a defense mechanism but when the sun goes away it'll perk back up again. Next time it wilts, don't water it but wait until the evening and see if it's perked back up again. If it hasn't, then it really needed watering, but if it perks back up on its own then it didn't need water. I also wonder if watering it with buckets like that is the best way, if you have clay soil most of that could be running off vs really soaking in, so you might be better off with something like a soaker hose or drip irrigation that will apply a lower volume of water over a longer period of time. The key to most plants is to water less frequently but more deeply, that will encourage their roots to go down deep where the soil stays moist for longer. If you give them frequent shallow watering, then their roots will all stay near the surface which dries out much quicker.
2zeus

(Zone 7b)

June 15, 2009
09:09 PM

Post #6693007

I agree with ecrane3, I have a clump of shasta daisy which will wilt a bit on very hot days, but by dusk, will be standing back up quite happily.

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