Growing
Azaleas: Azalea Hybrids - Evergreen Azaleas - Native
American Azaleas - Formosa Azaleas - Kurume Azaleas -
Satsuki Azaleas - Flame Azaleas -
How To Grow Azalea
Plants
Azalea
Hybrid Bushes And Native American Fiery (flame)
Azaleas
By:
Patrick Malcolm
Buying the best
azalea shrub offers a gardener many choices for various
landscapes. The Southern indica azalea hybrids
are the most popular flowering shrubs for warm climates that
includes the Formosa azaleas of white, pink, red, purple,
magenta, violet, and lavender. Other outstanding Formosa
azaleas are Duc DeRohan, Dutchess of Cypress, G.G. Gerbing,
George L. Tabor, Madonna White, and South.
Kurume azaleas are evergreen
azaleas with considerable cold hardiness and
were introduced into the United States around 1915 from Japan.
Japan has a climate much like mid-Atlantic and Southern States,
and Kurume azalea plants thrive in these similar climates.
Kurume azalea shrubs grow small waxy leaves and are considered
to be dwarf azalea plants, growing 4 feet tall, but rarely some
cultivars reach 6 feet in height. The flowers of Kurume azaleas
bloom in colors of pink, purple, white, red, orange, and
lavender, and some produce double flowers (double rows of
petals). Coral bells is important as a pink azalea to plant
underneath windows, and the intense flowering habit is also
notable in the pink ruffles azalea and the red ruffles
highlights any garden landscape planting. Snow is a pure white
Kurume flowering azalea cultivar.
Satsuki azalea plants were
developed in Japan as a bonsai specimen
(dwarf), however, some cultivars can grow 6 feet tall. The
flowers can exceed 5 inches, the size of a coffee cup saucer,
and the late blooming characteristic of Satsuka azaleas offers
the landscape gardener a flower that blooms after May 15 and
continues flowering through June.
Compact
azaleas are generally preferred for small
gardens like the Satsuki hybrid cultivars that includes the
Gumpo pink, Gumpo white, Gumpo red, Higasa rose-pink, and
Wakebishu dark pink azalea. Satsuki azalea shrubs will flower
abundantly.
The USDA began a
hybridization program of azalea shrubs at Glenn
Dale, Maryland to introduce landscape, cold
hardy plants of flowering azalea cultivars that would extend
the season for azalea bloom and offer Northern landscape
gardeners new colorful cultivars of flowering azaleas. Many of
these Glenn Dale azalea shrubs grow flowers similar to the
Formosa hybrids. Glenn Dale azaleas bloom with the diversity of
Japanese hybrids. Glenn Dale flowering azalea cultivars
introduced by the USDA hybridizers have produced over 400 kinds
of azalea shrubs, many available to buy through an internet
nursery site. Two sensational Glenn Dale azalea hybrids are the
salmon-pink Fashion azalea. The Fashion azalea can grow 6 feet
tall and is covered with medium sized flowers. A pure white
azalea, the H.H. Hume, is an excellent Glenn Dale azalea shrub
that blooms in late April. Many Glenn Dale azalea landscape
shrubs flower in May and June.
Not all azalea shrubs are
evergreen, but American native azalea shrubs
drop the leaves during winter and are called deciduous azaleas.
In the South, these native azaleas are called fragrant bush
honeysuckle or the Florida azalea (Rhododendron austrinum) with
colors of yellow, red, pink, white, yellow-orange, purple, and
bicolor light up the forests or garden landscape when
domesticated. The wild bush honeysuckle (Rhododendron
austrinum) is an early blooming native azalea shrub, with
fragrant flowers appearing before the leaves.
Native
flame azaleas can grow 10 feet tall and 15 feet
wide and can be grown into a flowering tree as
a specimen in the landscape garden. The size of most other
flowering landscape azalea bushes is quite variable, some dwarf
azaleas grow one foot tall and others up to 15 feet with age.
Some azaleas in Japan are reported to be several hundred years
old and grow into small trees with trunks up to one foot in
diameter.
Most gardeners prefer to buy
azalea shrubs at a nursery in the spring while the bush
blooms. Some azalea experts suggest planting
azalea shrubs in the winter or fall by buying containerized
nursery bushes, so that the root system can support beautiful
flowering in the spring. Most azalea shrubs are slow growing in
the landscape, and many gardeners prefer to buy large
established azalea clumps that will flower on a grandiose scale
in the spring.
Azalea bushes thrive under
the partial, filtered shade of pine trees,
along with companion dogwood trees and camellia shrubs. Azalea
plants are better grown in partial shade, and when planted next
to buildings, the north side offers protection from cold
damage. The flowers of the azalea plant last longer in filtered
pine tree shade because of the cooling effect. Pine tree straw,
pine cones, and pine tree bark make excellent mulch under
azalea bushes by conserving soil moisture and preventing weeds.
When planting azalea bushes, the shrub should be put into a
landscaped hole that contains half soil and half organic
matter, such as pine tree bark or peat moss. Azalea plants are
very shallow rooted and must be grown in an organic soil
mixture.
The azalea plant is acid
loving, and a pH of 4.5 to 5.5 is ideal for vigorous
growing. Watering may be necessary if rain does
not happen for a two week period and fertilizing is usually
avoided. Fertilizer can burn the tender fibrous root system. If
yellowing occurs in the leaves or leaf veins, Iron or Magnesium
(Epsom salts) will usually correct the condition. Leaves and
humus are the best organic fertilizers for azaleas and
generally fertilizer is not recommended, because the plant may
be damaged or killed by gardeners who wish to be "too kind" to
their plants. Azaleas flourish in an acid soil (low pH), and
lime should never be used, since it can be fatal to your azalea
plants.
If leaves of azalea shrubs show a dull,
dark green leaf color with reddening beneath,
this means that there are deficiencies of phosphorus in the
soil that can easily be corrected by applying phosphorous in
water-soluble fertilizer, such as miracle grow. Bright green,
shiny azalea leaves generally means that the azalea plant is in
a healthy state of growth.
If azalea bushes are pruned
after flowering, during the summer, there may
be only few azalea flowers formed the following season,
therefore the sooner you prune after flowering, the better your
chances are of ensuring beautiful flowering next year.
Azalea shrubs are easily
propagated and increased by taking a cutting
about 8 inches long and placing the cut end about 2 inches deep
in sand. Roots on azalea plants can form within a week during
June and July, and the plant may grow another foot tall before
it is ready to be planted permanently in your yard.
There are thousands of
different cultivars of azaleas. An excellent
reference book, Azaleas, by Fred Galle, describes 6000
flowering varieties, and is published by Timber Press. Very few
of these azalea cultivars are available commercially, because
most nursery garden centers do not wish to stock shrub
perennials, unless they are in bloom, and the blooming period
of azalea is restricted to a month or less. Azalea plants don't
sell well unless they are in full flower – except from year
round shipping by internet companies that can ship them at any
season.
Article Source:
http://www.new.citynewslive.com
Learn more about various plants, or
purchase ones mentioned in this article by
visiting the author's website: TyTy Nursery
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Azalea Hybrids - Evergreen
Azaleas - Native American Azaleas - Formosa Azaleas - Kurume
Azaleas - Satsuki Azaleas - Flame Azaleas
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How To Grow Azalea
Plants
Azalea
Hybrid Bushes And Native American Fiery (flame)
Azaleas
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