A large shrub covered with blossoms, like azalea and rhododendron, is always a dazzling show. Enjoy the luscious blooms of these flowering shrubs in the partially shaded areas of your garden.
June 30, 2015
A large shrub covered with blossoms, like azalea and rhododendron, is always a dazzling show. Enjoy the luscious blooms of these flowering shrubs in the partially shaded areas of your garden.
Azaleas and rhododendrons are ideal shrubs for partial shade.
Remember that azaleas and rhododendrons respond best to moderation in all aspects of cultivation: moderate light, moderate water and moderate pruning.
The common practice of putting fertilizer directly in the bottom of a planting hole can be fatal to azaleas and rhododendrons.
Azaleas and rhododendrons need a eight-centimetre (three-inch) mulch of wood chips, pine needles, bark chips, salt hay or oak leaves to keep the shallow roots cool and moist.
Once mature, they can survive moderate drought, although drought-stressed plants are more susceptible to disease, insects and cold. Help out wilted plants with a deep soaking.
Sudden yellowing of acid-loving plants, such as dwarf azaleas, hydrangeas and gardenias, could signal a drop in the plant's iron intake or a shift in the soil's pH level.
To encourage blooms in acid-loving azaleas, water them every week during their non-flowering period with 45 millilitres (three tablespoons) of vinegar in four litres (one gallon) of water.
Yellowish speckling of upper leaf surfaces and black spots on the undersides of azalea leaves indicate the presence of lace bugs or thrips.
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