Hydrangea fertilizer

How And When To Fertilize Your Hydrangeas

Still, it’s essential that you read up on the best care for your hydrangeas and follow the instructions on the fertilizer you choose to see the best results. While the fertilization process is not hard to figure out, you will have to get your hands dirty in the garden a few times to keep the hydrangeas healthy and strong. Below we’ve detailed the best fertilizers and the best steps for hydrangea bush feeding so your plants can outshine all the others.

How to Fertilize Hydrangeas

Incrediball Smooth Hydrangea, White Flowers, Landscape Shrub Proven Winners Sycamore, IL

For healthy hydrangeas that really put on a show, it’s important to fertilize properly. Here, a row of floriferous white hydrangeas—Incrediball® smooth hydrangea (Hydrangea arborescens)—dazzle this garden with their many blooms. Photo by: Proven Winners.

Hydrangeas make a beautiful addition to any garden, and like most plants, fertilizing properly with the right plant food will help them become their best selves-healthy, floriferous, and vibrant. Read on to learn more about the best type of fertilizer to use, when to apply it, how to apply it, and more.

Best Fertilizer For Hydrangeas

Specialty fertilizers aren’t necessary to help your hydrangea plants thrive. One of the following types of fertilizers will work well for any hydrangea type:

  • Organic, slow-release fertilizers for roses (such as a 15-10-10, or 10-5-5 formula) work well on hydrangeas, giving the plants the nutrients they need to increase the size and quantity of their blooms. If you’re looking for big blooms-and lots of them-this is the right fertilizer for your hydrangeas.
  • Organic, slow-release, all-purpose, balanced fertilizer also works well for hydrangeas. While a balanced fertilizer such as one with a 10-10-10 ratio will give your plant what it needs for healthy growth, it won’t boost the size and number of blooms your plant will produce like a rose fertilizer will.

A common question from gardeners is whether you need to purchase different types of fertilizer if you have more than one type of hydrangea. Fortunately, the answer is no! You can use the same type of fertilizer for all your hydrangeas, no matter how many different types you have. However, if you have a goal of enhancing or changing the color of specific hydrangea blooms, then you may want to make some adjustments depending on the type.

But be careful, some types of fertilizer could do more harm than good. Natalie Carmolli of Proven Winners® ColorChoice® Flowering Shrubs cautions against using an acidic fertilizer:

“It’s a myth that hydrangeas require acidic soil, so we don’t recommend a fertilizer for acid-loving plants, without a pH test. If you do that, it can push the pH levels to a dangerous or unfavorable level for your hydrangea.”

Nikko Blue Hydrangea, Bright Blue Flowers, Flowering Shrub Shutterstock.com New York, NY

Some hydrangeas change color depending on the type of soil. The flower heads of ‘Nikko Blue’ bigleaf hydrangea (Hydrangea macrophylla) tend to look more blue in acidic soil and more pinkish in alkaline soil. Photo by: ANGHI / Shutterstock.com

Fertilizing To Change Bloom Color

The bloom colors of certain types of hydrangeas are impacted by the acidity of the soil, and many gardeners love experimenting with this. For example, did you know you can add aluminum sulfate to make blue flower sepals bluer, while adding garden lime makes sepals of pink flowers look pinker?

An important note: If you do decide to experiment with intentionally changing your hydrangea’s bloom colors, we recommend doing it gradually. As you make changes, watch your plant carefully to make sure you don’t overdo it and harm your plant. It’s also important to get the timing right—for best results, you need to amend the soil long before your hydrangeas bloom—either in late fall or early spring.

When To Fertilize Hydrangeas and How Often

How often you fertilize and when you do it depends on whether your hydrangeas are planted in the ground or in pots.

  • For hydrangeas planted in ground. For optimal growth, bloom production, and quality, fertilize three times:
    • In early spring when plants are just leafing out
    • In early May to boost their flower production for summer
    • In late June/early July to help your plants finish the summer strong

    Never apply hydrangea fertilizer too close to fall. Here Betty Montgomery, author of Hydrangeas: How to Grow, Cultivate and Enjoy explains why:

    “You should never fertilize plants late in the growing season because you want them to go to sleep naturally. Late fertilization might produce new growth, and this new fall growth is tender. The new growth and buds might not have enough time to harden before a sudden frost strikes.”

    Potted Hydrangeas, Tuff Stuff Ah Ha Proven Winners Sycamore, IL

    Fertilizing hydrangeas in containers is a bit different than fertilizing those planted directly in the ground. If your potting soil contains slow release fertilizer you can fertilize less often. Shown here: Tuff Stuff Ah-Ha® reblooming mountain hydrangea (Hydrangea serrata). Photo by: Proven Winners.

    Fertilizer Application

    Apply fertilizer around the drip line of the plant and avoid letting it touch the plant-direct exposure to some fertilizers can burn your plant’s leaves. Water your hydrangeas well before applying fertilizer, and then water the fertilizer into the soil thoroughly, especially if you’re using granular fertilizer instead of liquid fertilizer.

    For detailed application information, follow the instructions on the fertilizer package.

    Here is an application tip from Michael A. Dirr, author of Hydrangeas for American Gardens:

    “My approach has always been cautionary; I use smaller quantities and apply them in split applications, for example, a late winter/early spring application, followed by an application after flowering.

    If you are confused by the myriad of recommendations from experts, simply read the fertilizer rates recommended on the package and divide by two.”

    Troubleshooting

    If your hydrangea plants aren’t doing well despite fertilizing using the right fertilizer for hydrangeas, check the pH and nutrient levels of your soil.

    • If the nitrogen levels are too high, the stems and leaves will flourish, but the blooms and root system may suffer.
    • High phosphorus levels prohibit the plant from taking in the required nutrients.
    • High potassium can cause irregular leaf growth, rot, and more.

    If you find that your hydrangeas are very leafy but not producing many blooms, that’s a sign that they may need a break from fertilizing. It’s okay to skip a year of fertilizing and instead put compost or organic matter around your hydrangeas. This will allow your soil to bounce back. Test the pH levels to ensure nutrients are available in youru soil. See more about why your hydrangea isn’t blooming.

    The first four minutes of this video by Garden Answer covers the basics of fertilizing hydrangeas.

    How And When To Fertilize Your Hydrangeas

    Blue hydrangea flowers in bloom

    The hydrangea genus is known for its many species and cultivars that provide gigantic clusters of colorful flowers and wide green foliage that hold their own beauty when the bush isn’t in bloom. When you’re growing these popular plants at home, you do not want to neglect their needs. Hydrangeas have simple yet specific growing requirements that need to be met. For a spectacular show in the summer months, you should aim to fertilize them correctly. With proper care, this will not be any more difficult than feeding other common flowering plants.

    Still, it’s essential that you read up on the best care for your hydrangeas and follow the instructions on the fertilizer you choose to see the best results. While the fertilization process is not hard to figure out, you will have to get your hands dirty in the garden a few times to keep the hydrangeas healthy and strong. Below we’ve detailed the best fertilizers and the best steps for hydrangea bush feeding so your plants can outshine all the others.

    Which fertilizer to buy for your hydrangeas

    Small blue hydrangea flower cluster

    Thankfully, you will not have to search high and low for a special fertilizer for your hydrangea bushes. They are not particularly picky plants, and they will happily grow with the help of some organic, slow-release fertilizer. Don’t worry if you are growing more than one variety of species of hydrangeas, either — all types will appreciate this basic fertilizer. Seasoned gardeners typically choose a 15-10-10 or 10-5-5 ratio that is meant for roses. This is the best option if you are looking to grow large and prolific blooms that will stun your neighbors. However, if you don’t mind the natural growth of your hydrangea bushes, a balanced fertilizer with a 10-10-10 formula is a perfectly fine option that provides your plants with all the nutrients they need.

    Be careful not to purchase quick-release fertilizer for your hydrangeas. These typically release too much nitrogen too quickly, which your plants will not appreciate. Too much nitrogen will cause plenty of growth, but all in the wrong areas. The foliage will grow quickly and the flowers will be smaller and more spread out come bloom time.

    When to get the feeding process started

    Woman watering hydrangea plant pot

    Hydrangea bushes should be fed at least twice per year, and even three times in some instances. If you are looking to grow large and colorful blooms atop gorgeous foliage, you should fertilize in the very early parts of spring, just before summer in May, and again at the peak of the summer. However, hydrangeas planted in rich organic matter may not need this third feeding in the hotter months. Depending on your soil, fertilizing the plants three times could lead to overfertilization, which creates smaller blooms.

    When you’re ready, apply the fertilizer to the soil beneath your bushes. Locate the drip line around your plant. The drip line is a circle around the perimeter of a plant where the rain, and other water, naturally drip off of the farthest-reaching branches or stems. Now, after watering your hydrangea bushes fully, you can apply the fertilizer to this line. Water the plant again immediately after the fertilizer. Do your best not to get the chemicals on the leaves or other parts of the bush. With the second watering, your fertilizer will be able to seep into the soil and spread out evenly to the roots below.

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