How to Care for Your Peonies Before and After Bloom
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If they鈥檙e older and have bloomed in the Pat, it might be time to split them. Dig the up carefully in Autumn and plant them further apart after splitting the roots, making sure to include a rhizome eye in each root collection. Do not plant the eye deeper than about a half inch. Do not expect blooms the first or second Spring. Watch them carefully in early Spring for buds and pinch off all but the largest o ea on each plant. After that they should do well without any more fussing.
Of course, you can transplant them. Just be aware that even if they have been flowering profusely, once you move them it may take a couple of years or more before they start to flower again.
If transplanting is not recommended then how are peonies propagated? Don't you have to dig up a tuber in order to plant it somewhere else?
Has anyone ever heard of the advice that you can't plant peonies in the same ground where peonies previously grew?
I never heard that but did buy new plants about 4 years ago. I planted them In the same spots I had my other peonies and they are growing great. The plants I replaced seemed to be producing less stems/flowers which is why I replaced them.
Hello,
I am looking for some Peoni roots to buy but they are very expensive. Any suggestion where to get it at a reasonable cost. I am looking for about 25 different variety in single color, multi color and fragrant one. If any one has surplus and wants to give free I will pay for the shipping.
Best,
Niranjan Patel
I dead head only the flower that has not produce a seed pod. I have been growing peonies from seed for 30 years and now have mixed colours that I did not originally have. A labour of love as it take Years!!! before they flower. I second the do not disturbed the roots as we had to dig pout 2 beds due to huge invasion of creeping bell flower. They are just starting to flower again after several years.
I have 2 Peonies that are between 20 and 25 years old. They grew and bloomed great then the last 2 years they come up, grow about 6 inches then nothing ust stay that way. I haven't moved them and have 2 others that are still growing as they have since I planted them all at the same time and in the same row. Can you tell me what the problem is?
I was glad to see you mentioned the diseases they get and that it does take 3 years before you see blooms. I have mass quantities Of peonies. They were here when I bought the house 20 years ago. They create a hedge on the east side of my house. Now that sounds amazing ....and it is....but also a problem. Not much room to plant anything else there, although I try. I have Rose of Sharon shrubs, coneflowers, b/e Susans and lireope and I sprinkle flower seeds hoping they鈥檒l sprout by the time I cut back the peony foliage. I tried digging out most of them 10 years ago but you鈥檇 never know it....still a thick hedge. And wherever I Transplanted them did take at least 3 Years To show a bloom. My main problem is the mildew diseases. Sometimes The flowers don鈥檛 even open cause the mildew ruins them first. I try various sprays and tonics but nothing stops it. And by late July most look so bad I have to chop off the leaves and there鈥檚 those ugly Stubbs. So it鈥檚 a constant battle usually placing pots of flowers here and there to fill the area. They are amazing beautiful flowers....but I wish I didn鈥檛 have so many. :)
There is yet another type of peony that is rarely mentioned. It's the fern leaf peony and I'm fortunate enough to have one and this year it has 5 buds. The blossom is nearly identical to the peony you talk about, but the leaves are beautiful, lacy, and delicate. They look very much like ferns. I got mine from a cousin in Iowa and was fortunate enough to have it survive a long hot July drive to New Jersey. It's lovely.