Hydrangeas left flowerless produce ‘glorious blooms every year’ if you avoid one mistake


Hydrangeas are known to give a real show of huge flowers for months during the summer. 

Their flowers can then fade from their vibrant early summer colours to translucent winter flower heads. 

Pruning hydrangeas helps gardeners get the most out of their plants, however, they should be aware that different types of hydrangeas need pruning at different times.

After pruning their hydrangea at the wrong time, one gardener took to the Hydrangeas in the UK Facebook page to ask for advice after his plant failed to produce flowers.

Matthew Roberts said: “Hi, I am a new visitor to your site hoping for some advice. My Hydrangea in my front garden, which looks like the same variety as on your home page [hydrangea macrophylla], has struggled to blossom over the last couple of years as with one I have in my back garden which has more of a flat flower to it.

“Only thing I can think I have done differently was to be quite ‘keen’ on pruning back both plants a couple of years ago under the advice of a landscape gardener who happened to be in the close when I was doing a garden tidy up.

“Since then the plants have turned into very large healthy-looking plants with lovely healthy-looking green leaves but little or no flowers. Have I done something wrong when I aggressively cut them back?

“Am thinking of just leaving them alone this year to see what happens but conscious, especially with the one in the front garden, I will end up again with a massive green bush taking over a quarter of the garden and encroaching over the neighbour’s fence if I don’t cut it back. Any help or pointers are greatly appreciated.”

For optimal blooms, hydrangea macrophylla should be pruned soon after the flowers have faded in late summer. 

Then the shrub will have a chance to produce new growth where next year’s flower buds will form. As this type of hydrangea blooms on old wood, gardeners pruning the plant in spring will not get any flowers that year.

Taking to the comments section group members highlighted this pruning mistake. Holly Maidens said: “This one in the photo is a macrophylla, they typically bloom on old wood which means the flowers this year will come from these stems. If you trim them, you’ll have no blooms this year. You trimmed them before so that will likely be why you didn’t get blooms.

“They are also not an overly large shrub, so they should not take over the garden or your neighbours.”

Julie Prescott wrote: “I never prune mine and get glorious blooms every year. I just deadhead in spring, then just leave them alone. Try it and see what happens.”

Wendy Hocking commented: “I wouldn’t touch it this year, blooms develop on last year’s stems, so any cutting back from now will be removing the flower buds.

“One of my bushes gets too large and I find it difficult to keep its size down without removing flower buds, I often get it wrong. Someone else said to keep it under control cut back one-third of the stems each year, forfeiting the flowers on them, but trimming the size of the plant.”

Luis Lluch claimed: “It resembles a big leaf hydrangea (hydrangea macrophylla). These buds are located at the ends of the stems so this species of hydrangea is best sited where it can attain its estimated size at maturity and then rarely pruned. 

“But do feel free to prune stems that remain leafless by the end of the astronomical spring. Deadheading of spent blooms – not the same as pruning – can be done safely without impacting blooming or winter protection but is more conveniently done at the end of winter, or never deadhead and they will drop on their own. 

“To deadhead, cut above the first pair of leaves. If the stem is leafless like yours is, cut the string that attaches each bloom to the stem. I suspect many of those stems may be leafless by the end of spring and could be pruned then. 

“To control the size, you can prune after it stops opening blooms in spring/early summer. At that time, you have a few weeks, maybe a month, before the production of flower buds starts again or you can use rejuvenation pruning.”

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