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zakruti.com » Do it Yourself - Handmade » Garden Answer
Planting Tuff Stuff Ah-Ha Hydrangea and a Japanese Maple Pt 1

Planting Tuff Stuff Ah-Ha Hydrangea and a Japanese Maple Pt 1

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
Planting Tuff Stuff Ah-Ha Hydrangea and a Japanese Maple Pt 1 Barbara: I first saw that type of hydrangea in Melbourne Australia when visiting my brother. I bought some for my place as roots because it was cheaper but I've discovered they're going to take forever to get big and other plants are taking advantage of the space and growing in and crowding them. I bought a couple big ones this year and they are so much more worth paying the extra for since they can hold their own space with the plants around them and look fabulous instantly.
Date: 2022-07-16

Comments and reviews: 9


I LOVE hydrangeas, but zone 9b isnt the best place to grow them either. Here, they thrive up against a wall that doesnt get too much sun & is shaded from the high afternoon heat. I went thru 3 before I finally had 2 that took & have adapted to the heat (it can get to 116 in summer) over the last 5 years. These are a pretty lace Cap! Cant wait to see this corner evolve! Wishing you all a lovely weekend!
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Could you actually plant the Japanese maple without hitting tree roots from the already established maple tree nearby? It may bully your Japanese maple for water and nutrients unless your irrigation system makes up for that.
Also, your Japanese maple may end up stunted if its root system is constricted by any aggressive and established roots of the maple tree. Unless you want that kind of look.

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I have never seen a black picket fence before - I live in England where we generally have solid wooden fence panels (weather boarded, hedges or stone/brick walls - there is the occasional picket fence but they are usually white or pastel sage green. I cant get over how striking your veg garden fences are - its so interesting to see. Xx
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Looks beautiful You guys have the most lovely pockets of gardens throughout your property.
I have a hydrangea that the previous owner of our home planted and it gets far too much sun and in turn is a very sad looking hydrangea. When is the best time of year to try and move it to a new location?

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Nothing like coming from the garden and walking into a new garden answer video. Love the area you planted and we recently planted around our birdbath as well. Love the hydrangeas as it is one our greatest obsessions. It will be awesome once the birds start coming around for a bath.
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In 2005, I planted a Japanese cutleaf maple at a corner of my deck. I also planted three hydrangeas that have purplish-blue blooms around it. That tiny little $130 tree is now 10' high and beautiful in morning sun to part sun and the hydrangeas bloom like gangbusters every year!
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Beautiful! Do you have any videos on how to create new beds/borders from lawn? I want to start cutting some new bed borders out of existing lawn but I'm a bit intimidated and not sure where to start. I'd like to start with a small area, and slowly increase it each year.
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I just received a new type of hydrangea called felicity and after watching this video I am thinking I want a few of the tiny tuff stuff they get 18 to 24. Hydrangeas are the most beautiful plants, next to roses, flowering maples, delphiniums and on and on. I also love gardening.
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Lovely grouping! We had to relocate a Japanese maple we planted in the spring. It wasn't happy at all in the sunny location. We moved it to a spot in the back yard where we hope less direct sun will make the little tree happier. Thanks for all your inspiration!
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