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Old 26-04-2011, 12:34 AM
Anglesey Gwen Anglesey Gwen is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Apr 2011
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Originally Posted by hellomabel View Post
Hi.

After the cold winter I left any dead or dying garden shrubs till the warmer weather to see if they would recover of their own volition. Some have, but others haven't, so I'm wondering how best to tackle the sufferers or whether it's a wasted effort.

Conditions: slightly acid soil, northfacing garden in a valley in Cornwall, damp climate.

1. A hardy fuchsia: big, no leaves, flowers or signs of green anywhere yet, but there is white inside the twigs. My inclination is to leave it till maybe June. Anything else I should do?

2. A gangly willow-leaved hebe: the leaves are shrivelling from the bottom of the plant up. How will it cope with a drastic prune and feed?

3. A hydrangea: has never flowered in ten years (hydrangeas do well in our area), but in previous years it produced leaves. This year very little except a few tiny green shoots at the base. It sits in a dappled shady shrub border under a large cherry tree. Drastic prune and feed?

4. Euphorbia mellifera: up to last year it used to be a very large, healthy specimen in a giant pot outside the front door (up against the front wall, with full sun). I forgot to wrap it in bubblewrap this winter so I think the frost killed it - there are a few brown shoots, no greenery showing. Would it be OK to plant another one in the same soil or is it possible there's life in the old one still?

Sorry this is so long! Any tips much appreciated.
Hi, I'm a Newbie living in North Wales, but hope this helps.

1. My hardy fushias which narmaly retain leaves have suffered from the 20cm of snow we had here (first in 25 years), however my yellow leaved one and my more normal one are breaking from the base. There is hope for yours!

2. Leave the hebe until Midsummer to see if it breaks from the base, then prine back to the new growth. Some hebes may have split there branches near the ground. This is normally terminal, but you can take cuttings from any health growth before it dies.

3. Can't help with the hydrangea. I've never come across the non flowering problem.

4. Euphorbia mellifera: In my fathers Cornish garden (St Ives) they grow in the soil & self seed, growing out of walls etc. Mine is normaly green all winter but has been reduced to dead sticks. I am giving mine more time as we have only just stopped having frosts. I think you could wait for it to spring into life too.

Good Luck (Sorry about the length too!)