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Planting, Growing, and Caring for Asters
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Asters are pretty forgiving plants. Are you sure you don’t have a biennial variety? Asters bloom best in full sun but tolerate part shade. They do not like to sit in water, so well draining soil is important, and good quality—loamy or composted—soil helps. Next year, add a shovelful of compost at the base in spring.
I have heard that aster can grow to be too large of a bush. I live in SE Pa and would like to grow it in a pot, maybe planted into the ground with the bottom torn open a bit to control its growth. Is that advisable? And would that control it from getting too tall and large?
You can grow asters of varying sizes; choose what you want. You could plant it in a pot and put the pot into the soil to control it. If the plant is cramped in the pot, it may become cramped (leggy or some other manifestation of stunted growth) but you should go to or contact a plant vendor and talk to them with the goal of purchasing a plant that will perform in the way you want it to.
I live in zone 6 and have been looking for hardy perennials that can handle full sun.
I just purchased some beautiful asters and am concerned because it gets hot here and above it says cool, moist summers and right now it's hot and dry.
Any planting tips that can help me ensute they can thrive in spite of the heat?
Thanks; all help will be very much appreciated.
I bought aster powder puff seeds and they've grown to be about one inch tall. They're still very young but there are white-orange round things that are growing as well and I'm very concerned. Also, their are bites on the leafs and I don't know how to get rid of whatever that's eating the leafs. Please help!! Thank you!
It sounds like your asters have a rust disease. You should remove all of the leaves that are infected and the entire plant if all of the leaves have rust.
I just bought 2 aster plants that I'd like to plant in 2 pots I have on my front porch (full sun). I'm in zone 5b and am wondering what my options are. Is it best to plant the asters in the pots, then bring the pots in and keep them over the winter to plant in my garden in the summer, or put them in pots now and then plant them in my garden after they've finished blooming this fall? Thanks!
You can either leave them in the pots outside (do not bring them in) and plant them in the early spring or go ahead and plant them now, but do it soon, as night temperatures are dropping fast! Either way, they require a cold dormancy period so they must stay outside.
This is the first time i had them. I water them every other day and they started to turn brown. So just water them twice a week and they still turn brown on me. Now they all died. What did i do wrong. And i even mulch them.
Hi Donna,
I suspect they died from overwatering. I suggest starting over with new plants. Water them when you plant them, and then wait until they dry out a bit before giving them a good soaking. Plants like less-frequent, deep watering. Also, pay attention to the weather and the moisture level of the soil. Some weeks you will water more, others less. Air temperature and rainfall really determine how much water your plants need from week to week.