🌼 How to Deadhead Coneflowers - QG Day 127 🌼
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- Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
- Today, on day 127, we show you how to deadhead coneflowers 🌼 on our own coneflower plants and why you 😁 might want to do the same. Watch to see our deadheading technique and what to watch for before you make your cuts.
In this video, you'll find out how to deadhead your coneflowers and why it makes sense to do it. Definitely leave any comments or questions down below for us, and let us know if you deadhead your coneflowers or leave them alone.
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THIS IS INFORMATION!!!! THANK YOU SOOO MUCH !
I HAD TO WATCH 6 OTHER
""INFORMATIVELY USELESS"" VIDEOS
UNABLE TO GIVE DECISIVE VISUALLY EXPLANATORY TIPS TO HELP ME TO DECIDE WHERE TO CUT /DEAD HEAD MY BLANKET FLOWERS ,,,,, THANKS FROM WEST VA
Thanks for the terrific up-close detail on how to deadhead. I'm new to perennial gardening so I'm looking forward to following your guidance. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and expertise!
Very helpful video! Also thanks for mentioning that deadheading them isn't something that Needs to be done!
Hi @alien6091!! 👋🏼👋🏼 Thank you for saying that and, yes, some plants do need to be deadheaded to keep flowering, but Coneflowers, mostly, will keep flowering whether you deadhead or not. 👍🏼👍🏼
Thanks you so much for very informative video🙏😍🇬🇧
I appreciate your explanation of deadheading Coneflowers. Very helpful
Thank you! I like the name quarantine gardeners!
Love my coneflowers and so do the birds. I don't deadhead them, the goldfinches like them and seeds produce more plants.
@@markday5797 American Yellow Finches are ALL OVER my coneflowers and coreopsis!! I never see them if I dead head! I kind of do a half and half thing - half dead end half leave it!
Thanks for the great view of the new buds! Really helpful!
Hi Liz! 👋 Thank you for watching. We are really happy the video was helpful for you.
Finally I know why I've had no success in the past with my coneflowers.
HI again! Just bought some beautiful coneflowers and now I know how to deadhead them! Thanks again for a great video.
Hi Patricia! 👋 Thank you for sending us photos via email and we're so happy our video was helpful! We loved seeing your beautiful, new plants!! 😄
@@SpokenGarden Thank you!!😊
Thanks for the info to deadhead coneflowers. I've been wondering every time that I get into my garden.
Great simple to the point video!
Hi @marilynl.willauer4507!!👋🏼👋🏼 Thank you for watching and for saying that. We hope it was helpful for you in your garden. 😊😀
Soooo helpful! Thank you for this video!
Hi Joua! 👋Thank you for saying that and for watching! We are soo happy you found it helpful. It's why we are here doing what we do. 😉👍
Great advice, love my many coneflowers.
Great tips. Very Informative Channel. Thanks !
Hi Hale! 👋🏼👋🏼 Thank you for watching and for letting us know. Happy gardening!😊😀
Thank you! This is my first of growing a cone flower. They are beautiful! Didn't know for sure to dead head or not.😊
Hi Dianna! 👋 That's soooo exciting this is your first time growing coneflowers. Yay! And good for you for trying something new. 😃 That can be hard for a lot of people. It's your choice to deadhead your plant. It does make it look cleaner and more inviting, but if you want to collect seeds for next year, then keeping them on until they are ready to save is a good move, too. Thank you for watching and commenting! 😉
Awesome. Thanks for sharing
Thank you !!
You are so very welcome and thank you for watching!! 👋👍😀😊
Hi thank you for the tips! About to groe mine here in Malaysia
Hi sobering cat! 👋 Thank you for watching and we hope it was helpful! We love coneflowers and wish you a wonderful growing season! 😀
This channel will double its subs in the next year with this level of production.
Good video...thanks for the tips!
Hi Donna! 👋 Thank you for saying that and for watching. 😃
Thank you. That was short and sweet! New sub.
Hi Iam4wine! 👋 Thank YOU for being here, for watching, and for subscribing. Yay! We appreciate your feedback and hope our video was helpful. 😉👍
Thanks. This iwas appreciated.
Thanks! What if there really aren’t any buds all the way down a long stem that has a spent flower on top? Do I have to wait? If not, is there a certain level I should cut down to?
That's what I wanted to know too!
Thank you
I haven’t dead headed my. They are really looking faded and not very pretty but I have not had any other buds come on the stems. They’re kind of packed in there together. Do I need to make more airspace for them with that help more buds to form?
Thank you for the tips! So if you leave the plants as is through fall and winter what should you do to get them ready for the spring? Take the plant all the way down to the base?
Ty much
👍
Hi @RoseMary-vs3io!! 👋🏼👋🏼 Thank you for watching our deadheading video and we hope it was super helpful!
Hi can you help me please l live in the Caribbean and you know how the whether is here i want to know how to plant this flowers form seed please
Thanks! I have a black thumb, and my roses always look like yellow-and-black spotted skeletons (no matter how much I fertilize and treat) around mid-July, but this year I have gorgeous coneflowers! Why? Idk. Idc. Might be this be the clay soil. But, I’m just thrilled to see them and desperate to keep them alive. I appreciate the help!
Thank you for your video!! I have White Swans in pots also and I was wondering what do you guys do before the first frost? Should I cut it right to soil level and put the pots somewhere covered from rain/snow? I am based in London (zone 6 - 9). I am hoping that they will come back year after year even if they are potted.
Hi Cristina! 👋 Thank you for watching. 😃 Great questions! For our perennials in pots, we plan to let them die back down to their pot soil level and then cut them down to a couple of inches (centimeters) above the soil and plant crown. Yes, placing your potted plants somewhere under cover with protection from snow and freezing temperatures is very good idea. Their tops will be dormant and sleeping, but their roots are still kind of more dozing than asleep and will continue to breath and grow needing some water. So, they will need some watering being up against a building and under cover, but minimal water, if that makes sense. Another way to think of perennial potted plants is as if they are planted in the ground and still having all the snow, rain, and other weather around them. Now, if they are in a pot, they still need some of that moisture, but the cold and freezing temps will affect them more because their roots are just on the other side of the container wall not being insulated like they would be in the ground with surrounding soil. Their roots are exposed and a hard freeze can kill plant roots. Placing them up against a building for residual heat over the winter is a good idea so they can't be affected by freezing temperatures as much. Also, if you have any mulch, you can mound up around each pot, like the sides of a volcano, with the mulch to insulate their roots over the winter. This is called "heeling-in" and is a good way to help plants in pots or balled-&-burlapped plants overwinter in place or in large groupings. And you don't have to move them. We might have to do video on this. 😲 Thank you for your questions and for watching. 👍😎😃
WHAT ABOUT CUTTING FOR PUTTING INTO A VASE ?
I liked your video on how to harvest cone flowers but the music was way too loud which was quite annoying and made it hard to finish the video.
I have wondering about deadheading Shasta Daisy. Is it the same idea?
Hi Joanne! 👋 Great question. Yes, it is very similar to deadheading Shasta daisy's. There might be some minor differences between the two techniques in finding the next upcoming flower, depending on which species you are deadheading, but the theory is the definitely the same. Hope that helps and thank you for watching! 🌞😎
I just got echinca plant and I don't what to do with it ,
The deer deadhead my coneflowers, often before they bloom. 😥
I have a question about the seed pod on the deadheaded flower, is there any to remove them for planting?
Hi L Pruitt! 👋 That's a great question and we made a video especially for this. Here is our video link: ruclips.net/video/_tLzlltcm1U/видео.html
We hope this helps answer your question and thank you for being here and commenting! 😃
Which Cultivars of ConeFlowers need to be deadheaded? I have so many different ones than I forget whats what
Hi Chosen1One! 👋 Thank you for watching and great question! There are sooo many coneflowers out there, as you said, that it is really hard to know if they do need deadheading or not. Most do not, but some might, and it's just good practice to treat and know each one individually if they need to be deadheaded. We would say to deadhead your coneflowers anyway so they look tidy and clear of any debris that can feed or harbor pests like earwigs that will eat flower petals and other plant parts. Hope that helps and thanks again for watching! 👍😃
@@SpokenGarden Thanks for the reply. Do you know the cheerleader type or the nickname they give them because they look like pom poms? That is the main type im unsure about and find conflicting info on it
Thanks, but you left out the most important part! You said nothing about how to know which ones to deadhead or not.. Other than super quick saying this one looks a little spent or something like that, but you didn’t go into how to select which flowers to deadhead or when whatsoever. Just FYI thanks anyway!
Thank you!!