Growing and Caring for Rhododendrons and Azaleas
How to care for these wonderful flowering shrubs!

Azaleas can be either evergreen or deciduous. Deciduous Azaleas are known as
Mollis or Exbury Azaleas. They bloom in the early spring with vivid orange and yellow colors. They
can be grown from seed if the seeds are collected in the fall and sown on top of moist peat at about
70 degrees F.
Evergreen Azaleas are known as broad leaf evergreens because they are do not
have needles. They bloom later in the spring, and are usually propagated in the fall over bottom heat, discussed in detail at http://www.freeplants.com Rhododendrons are also broad leaf evergreens
and are also propagated over bottom heat in early winter.
The best time to prune Rhododendrons and Azaleas is in the spring right after
they bloom. These plants start setting next years flower buds over the summer, so late pruning will
cost you some blooms next year, so get them pruned as soon as they finish blooming. It’s also a good
idea to pick off the spent blooms so the plants don’t expel a lot of energy making seeds, unless of
course you’d like to grow them from seed. But keep in mind that they don’t come true from
seed.
Seeds from a red Rhododendron are likely to flower pale lavender. Cuttings
insure a duplicate of the parent plant. How do you prune Rhododendrons and what does pinching a
Rhododendron mean? These are frequently asked questions.
Pinching is a low impact form of pruning that is very effective for creating
nice, tight full plants when you are growing small plants from seeds or cuttings. Typically a
Rhododendron forms a single new bud at the tip of each branch. This new bud will develop into another
new branch, another bud will form and the process will continue. If left alone this will produce a
very lanky plant with a lot of space between the branches forming a very unattractive
plant.
So if you are starting with a plant that is nothing more than a rooted cutting
all you have to do is pinch off this new growth bud as soon as it is about 3/8” long. Just grab it
between your fingers and snap it completely off. When you do this the plant usually responds by
replacing that single bud with two, three, or even four new buds in a cluster around the bud that you
pinched off. Each one of these buds will develop into branches and eventually a single bud will
appear at the tip of each of these branches, and of course you should come along and pinch each one
of those off forcing the plant to produce multiple buds at the end of each of these
branches.
The more often you pinch off these single buds, the more branches the plant
will form, making a nice, tight, full plant. This is especially helpful with young plants such as
rooted cuttings or young seedlings.
But what about larger plants, how do I prune them? I prune mine with hedge
shears!!! I just have at it and trim them like I would a Taxus or a Juniper, and guess what? The
result is a very tight compact plant loaded with beautiful flowers. My Rhododendrons are so tightly
branched that you can not see through them, and that is the result of vigorous pruning with hedge
shears. Sure you can use hand shears, and you’ll have a nicer plant because of it, but I just use the
hedge shears because that’s the tool that I happen to have in my hand as I am going
by.
Keeping Rhododendrons and Azaleas healthy and happy is a simple as
understanding what they like. First of all they like to grow in a climate that suites their tastes.
Many varieties of both don’t like it in the north, and to prove the point they will up and die as
soon as extreme cold weather hits. Buy plants that are known to be hardy in your
area.
Here in northern Ohio the following Azaleas seem to do well. Hino Crimson
(red), Stewartstonia (red), Herbert (lavender), Cascade (white), Delaware Valley (white), and Rosebud
(pink). Hardy Rhododendrons include Roseum Elegans (pinkish lavender), English Roseum (pinkish
lavender), Nova Zembla (red), Lee’s Dark Purple, Chinoides (white), and Cunningham’s
(white).
How should you fertilize Rhododendrons and Azaleas? These broad leaf evergreens
are laid back and like to take it slow and easy. Do not fertilize them with quick release nitrogen
fertilizers, it could kill them. Instead give them an organic snack, like Millorganite or well rotted
cow manure or compost. Millorganite is an organic fertilizer made of granulated sewage
sludge.
No it doesn’t smell any worse than other fertilizers, and plants like it
because it is plant and soil friendly. It won’t burn the plants, and it actually reactivates the
micro-organisms in the soil. That’s a good thing. Most full service garden centers carry
Milorganite.
A long time ago somebody let the word out that Rhododendrons are acid loving
plants, and people are always asking me if I think their struggling Rhododendron needs more acid. The
answer is no. Your struggling Rhododendron probably needs a great big gulp of oxygen around it’s root
system.
Rhododendrons do not like wet feet. They don’t even like high humidity let
alone wet soil around their roots. They like to be high and dry, and like an unobstructed flow of
oxygen to their roots. You can accomplish this by planting them in a bed raised at least 10” with
good rich topsoil. They will be smiling from branch to branch.
A few years back my friend Larry and I had several hundred small Rhododendrons
that we were going to grow on to larger plants. We planted most of them in Larry’s backyard which is
fairly good soil, but a little sticky. We didn’t have room for all of them so we planted the last 105
down the road from my house in a field we were renting. (Never heard of anybody renting a field? You
should get out more.)
This location had absolutely no water for irrigating and the soil was very dry
and rocky. Other plants at that location often struggled during the dog days of summer due to the
lack of water, but those Rhododendrons were as happy as pigs in mud. They out grew the ones at
Larry’s house by twice the rate and we sold them years earlier than the others.
My point? Rhododendrons don’t like wet feet. They do well in the shade,
but contrary to popular belief they do even better in full sunlight.
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