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How to Transplant Peonies. ... Just be sure to toss out (i.e., don't compost) diseased foliage in the fall. Leggy stems, which means your plant isn't getting enough direct sunlight. You'll need to ...
"In either fall or early spring, I fertilize my peonies with granular Azomite fertilizer, just a small 1/4 cup sprinkled in a circle around the drip line of the plant," says Spitzmiller.
Paeonia brownii is a glaucous, summer hibernating, perennial herbaceous plant of 25–40 cm high with up to ten stems per plant, which grow from a large, fleshy root. Each pinkish stem is somewhat decumbent and has five to eight twice compound or deeply incised, bluish green, hairless, somewhat fleshy leaves which may develop purple-tinged edges when temperatures are low.
It is 50–70 cm (20–28 in) tall and broad, with 9-lobed leaves 20–40 cm (8–16 in) long. The flower buds appear in late spring (May in the Northern Hemisphere). They are large and round, opening into fragrant, cup- or bowl-shaped flowers 8–16 cm (3–6 in) in diameter, with 5–10 white, pink, or crimson petals and yellow stamens . [ 1 ]
Peonies are generally slow to grow and have flowers that only last briefly and are fragile under weather conditions such as wind, rain or hot temperatures. [7] In comparison, Paeonia × suffruticosa, as a tree, survives longer than the rest of the peonies. The woody stems of tree peonies allow the plant to survive in winter. [9]
Tree peonies: These have a bushy shape and woody stems that don’t die back in the fall. They shed their leaves like other deciduous shrubs. They shed their leaves like other deciduous shrubs.
Paeonia californica is a perennial herbaceous plant of 35–70 cm high, that retreats underground in summer, and reoccurs with the arrival of the winter rains. It has lobed leaves, elliptic (cup-shaped) drooping flowers with dark maroon-colored petals, and many yellow anthers.
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