Content
- Only when absolutely necessary: transplant the farmer's hydrangea
- Reasons for transplanting
- The right time for transplanting
- Step-by-step instructions for transplanting
- Tips & Tricks
Plant your farmer's hydrangea before or after flowering!
Only when absolutely necessary: transplant the farmer's hydrangea
The best is, of course, if the farmer's hydrangea does not have to be implemented, but can simply stay at their location. Sometimes transplanting is inevitable. Fortunately, however, older farmer hydrangeas usually tolerate such a measure very well.
Reasons for transplanting
There are of course many reasons for converting even older plants:
So you see, transplanting the farm hydrangeas sometimes has no alternative. However, the conversion also has an advantage, because it prevents the plant from aging. Transplanted, older specimens often get a proper growth and flowering boost once they have been placed in the right location.
The right time for transplanting
There are two equally suitable times for implementing the farmer's hydrangea. You can transplant the shrub both in autumn after flowering and in spring, before it sprouts. Both times have their advantages and disadvantages. For example, hydrangeas that have been converted in the fall can not have enough time until the onset of winter to root well and, accordingly, survive the cold season only with injuries. But even the early spring threatens with late frosts that can tamper with the plants. But the hydrangea is no longer in the "Winterruhemodus", but its growth energies are immediately growing.
Step-by-step instructions for transplanting
When transplanting, the following procedure has proven itself:
Tips & Tricks
The best day for transplanting is a covered or cloudy day as the plant evaporates less water and copes with the transplant shock much better.