Time to Divide Some Heucheras! (Zone 5b)

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  • Опубликовано: 14 янв 2025

Комментарии • 40

  • @MsArdieT
    @MsArdieT 10 месяцев назад +1

    I really like her style of informing us. She makes a lot of sense without any boring, long winded lectures that may or may not be valid. I'm checking out her other videos. Thanks!!

  • @brotv1851
    @brotv1851 9 месяцев назад +2

    i love heucheras yay!

  • @stefanischilling6401
    @stefanischilling6401 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the video! Great information.

  • @ivyfasko9699
    @ivyfasko9699 Год назад +2

    Just FYI, I'm a hosta grower, and in our FB hosta page, it was discovered that the arbor vitae roots essentially strangle the hosta roots when they are panted near each other. I mention this because you noted that your heucheras nearest the arbor vitae are not doing as well as the others. Might consider keeping them a little further away from each other. 🙂🙃🙂

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  Год назад +1

      That's so interesting! We are going to have to redo that area in short order as the now huge arbs were originally planted much too close to the house & they are damaging the eavestrough. I love how they look, though, so was considering replacing them (at the proper distance!) but you've made me reconsider - thanks so much for letting me know!

  • @bluebirdhomestead
    @bluebirdhomestead 2 года назад +3

    Hi Margret! Just stumbled across your channel this morning, so I will be making my way through your other video :) Dividing plants and propagating is such a great way to save money!

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  2 года назад +4

      Hi! I LOVE propagating plants - the more the better! I have so many "singles" in my garden that are only a year or two old & I'm itching for them to get bigger so that I can spread them around 😁

    • @bluebirdhomestead
      @bluebirdhomestead 2 года назад +2

      @@TheGardeningMe Hahah I know the feeling!

  • @suzetteccc
    @suzetteccc Год назад +1

    Thanks for this video. I love heucheras and have lots. I'm always cutting them back, and I have a few that need to be divided and replanted or sometimes I put them in pots if they seem weak.... I bet those limp cuttings lived.👍🏻

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  Год назад +1

      Our snow has just melted away from that bed & I'm seeing green (or purple!) - was worried with them being crushed by 5 feet of snow this winter!

  • @Jo-throughthekeyhole
    @Jo-throughthekeyhole 2 года назад +2

    I like the really dark leaved heucheras. I left a Palace Purple at my old house. We only have a small garden here but I might be able to find a place for one at the front of the border.

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  2 года назад

      They are such lovely plants & not too large either...I'm sure you'll be able to squeeze one in!

  • @johnwilson6954
    @johnwilson6954 2 года назад +2

    While watching you dig up and tear your plants apart, I thought "Who is this crazy woman?" But your "next day" inspections provide some optimism that the heucheras will survive! I suspect that at this time of year, when perennials are actively growing, dividing them like this will still allow for root formation and a subsequent flush of new growth. Will be watching for your next update! 😉

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  2 года назад +2

      🤣Will be giving that update later this season - good or bad, lol!

  • @nattyw495
    @nattyw495 9 месяцев назад +1

    Enjoyed video found it interesting and informative i was wondering if your purple color coral bells are struggling due to arbovites shrub roots, have you ever thought of doing big containers in that area and do different Cora bells in a planter instead.. due to limited mobility planters in island beds are good for my style of gardening..im glad your able to try different types of rooting its quite fun to watch how mother nature chooses to decide how shes gonna help plants rebound..

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  9 месяцев назад +1

      Hi! They seem to be doing ok - but not fabulous. I have noticed that the heucheras near the arbs don't do as well as those in other areas of the garden so I may end up moving some of them to a different spot this year. We actually have to remove the arbs at some point as they were planted only a couple of feet from the house, probably 30 years ago, and are now overhanging the gutters/roof by several feet - but I hate to get rid of mature trees so I've been procrastinating! And you are so right - garden experimenting is so much fun!

  • @suzetteccc
    @suzetteccc Год назад

    I'm over here in Vancouver!👋🏼

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  Год назад +1

      Hope your garden is doing ok with all the rain!

    • @suzetteccc
      @suzetteccc Год назад

      @@TheGardeningMe Everything is absolutely soaked, but at least it wasn't freezing! So I just noticed one of my heucheras has a few leaves around it but there is a big stem in the centre with nothing on it really and no sign of new growth. Should I just cut it off?

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  Год назад +3

      @@suzetteccc From your description, perhaps the plant in the middle of the clump has rotted out & the green you are seeing is a baby offshoot. I would check the base of the green section to see if it has a stalk that you can cleanly sever from the main plant & root it as I showed in the video. The main part of the plant may be a goner, but you may want to hold off on removing it, just in case it does come back to life in the coming weeks. Good luck!

    • @suzetteccc
      @suzetteccc Год назад

      @@TheGardeningMe Thanks. That's what I'll do!

  • @pdxcontent
    @pdxcontent Год назад +2

    Great video! I’d love to see an update. If there is one… how do I find it?

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  Год назад +1

      Thanks! I didn't get around to doing an update, but I'll make sure to include this area in a video once spring gets doing. Got my fingers crossed that they all survived the 5' of snow that was dumped on them this winter!

    • @pdxcontent
      @pdxcontent Год назад

      5” shouldn’t hurt them.
      We had 10” here in Portland oregon which is a lot for us! I just divided one of mine yesterday and got 8 new plants.

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  Год назад

      @@pdxcontent Good to know about the snow - and 8 new plants is awesome!

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  Год назад

      @@pdxcontent Just realized you said 5" - we actually have 5' (as in feet!) on them, lol!! Even here that's considered a lot.

  • @JS-jl1yj
    @JS-jl1yj 10 месяцев назад +1

    Did it work or not? Which way worked better? In the ground or in the pots? Here in Canada, they are called Coral Bells. Today, I accidentally discovered that they are also known as Heuchera. I've had my 24 plants for over 10 years. They are very stalky and woody looking. Over the years, some died off over the winter. So about 5 years ago, I tried to replenish them by collecting their seeds at the end of summer and starting new seedlings from seed, indoors, in early spring. The first time I tried it, the seeds were taking so long to germinate that I was about to give up on them altogether. Luckily, I happened to read the info on a seed packet in the garden centre and that's when I learned that they can take up to 30 days to germinate. So, I continued to wait some more. I had the seed tray next to a sunny window. Eventually, they did germinate but they grew so slowly, that I could not imagine myself transplanting them into the ground while they were so tiny. So, I kept them indoors for the entire year and transplanted them the following spring. Since then, they got pretty old again so I decided to grow more of them from seed again. Only this year, I invested into some grow lights. This time, under the grow light, they germinated for me in half the time. Today, Feb. 24, some of the baby leaves are already about the size of a nickel. Had I known that the old plants can be divided and replanted, I would have saved myself a whole lot of work trying to grow them from seed.

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  10 месяцев назад +2

      That is awesome to know! I'm trying to grow them from seed as well & last year it was a bust. This time round I tried winter sowing them - we'll see if that works. As for dividing them, it worked out quite well, but I have to say, the ones in the pots did a lot better than those in the ground - probably because of the competition from the arborvitae roots - overall, though, it was a success. Thanks so much for sharing your heuchera journey!

  • @janetmays4978
    @janetmays4978 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for a great demonstration. Can you post your gardening zone in your title?

  • @marilynhayes4725
    @marilynhayes4725 3 месяца назад

    Did you ever do an update to this video? I can't find it and i would love to know how they faired.
    Did they root when you had very little root? How did the tiny ones do?
    And what happened to the 3 you potted up?

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  3 месяца назад +1

      Hi! I haven't done an update video yet - I should put that on the list! Almost all survived - I think I only lost one. Surprisingly, the ones in the pots grew better than those in the ground. I'm thinking it was the root competition from the arbs, esp. as I don't have drip in that area yet. At this point, they are all doing quite well. Hope this helps!

  • @JS-jl1yj
    @JS-jl1yj 10 месяцев назад

    I subscribed to your RUclips channel today, because of this video and because you live in my growing zone, in Ontario! BTW, I live in GTA. It's too bad that I can't find you on Facebook.

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks so much! Yeah - I don't really use Facebook - just so much social media I can handle, lol :)

  • @MarikaMedia
    @MarikaMedia Год назад +1

    Will just putting them in water help promote a root system or is it best to just transplant them back in the ground?

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  Год назад +2

      Hi Marika - that's a great question. I haven't tried rooting them in water so I can't say, but usually, if something roots easily in soil (like heuchera definitely seems to do), I think it's better for the plant overall to do it that way as sometimes cuttings rooted in water get a bit shocked when you eventually put them in the soil.

    • @MarikaMedia
      @MarikaMedia Год назад +2

      @@TheGardeningMe thank you so much!!

  • @mercury_rising
    @mercury_rising 2 года назад +2

    I prefer the fuller look 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @TheGardeningMe
      @TheGardeningMe  2 года назад +1

      I like the full look as well & probably could have let them go a bit longer but I figured I would deal with them now as by the end of the summer they would have likely looked a bit ratty as those stalks got even longer. Thanks for watching!