Lilac: varieties, selection and care rules

Content
  1. Description
  2. The best varieties and their characteristics
  3. How to choose?
  4. Landing rules
  5. How to reproduce?
  6. How to care?
  7. How to prepare for winter?
  8. Examples in garden design

The delicate beauty and fragrance of lilac bushes leaves few people indifferent. Exciting aroma, splendor of flowering and a variety of colors of inflorescences make lilacs an impeccable decoration of gardens and parks. The decorative possibilities of this representative of the olive family are used with might and main in landscape design when creating syringaria, different types of hedges, compositions of mixed flowering shrubs.

Despite the fact that now many new plants have appeared in ornamental gardening, lilac continues to be one of the most popular crops.

Description

Lilac belongs to the genus of multi-stemmed ornamental deciduous shrubs. Currently, there is no single classification of this kind in the scientific and educational literature. This is mainly due to the emergence of a large number of hybrids - both created by breeders as a result of crossing of closely related species, and natural, formed in a similar way in the wild.

The species diversity includes about 36 items. The range of most wild species is in the mountainous regions of South-Eastern Europe (the countries of the Balkan Peninsula, the South Carpathians, Hungary) and various regions of Asia (China, Japan, Korea, Primorsky Krai, Amur region). There are several varieties of hybrid origin found only in culture.

All representatives of the olive family are deciduous plants in the form of a multi-stemmed bush, less often a tree more than 7 m high with small flowers of various colors from snow-white to lilac. They are collected in complex inflorescences-panicles of different lengths, densities and shapes (pyramidal, cylindrical, oval).

The leaf arrangement is opposite, the leaves are most often simple, sometimes pinnately separate with incisions along the central axis. The leaf blades are dense, stiff, with a pronounced mesh of veins and long, strong petioles. The flowers consist of a short small bell-shaped calyx, a 4-membered corolla, the tube of which can be long, cylindrical or shortened.

The length of the flowering period is determined by the variety, on average it lasts 15-20 days, starts in May and ends in June. The time of the first lilac bloom depends on the way it is grown. Saplings obtained from seed material, propagated by layering or cuttings tend to bloom 3-5 years after planting.

Lilac, grafted onto a stock of 4-5 years of age, begins to bloom in a year. Abundant flowering from this plant can only be expected for 10-12 years from the moment of planting.

Provided proper care, representatives of the olive family will retain the ability to bloom magnificently for half a century or more.

The best varieties and their characteristics

The modern varietal variety of lilacs has about 2400 items. The clone variety of this plant managed to avoid the usual fate of the original varieties - obsolescence in the event of successful clones appearing. Most of the forms were developed during the first half of the 20th century. Many of them have exceptional decorative qualities and are the perennial favorites of landscape designers.

Ordinary

Common lilac is considered the most decorative of all varieties and is commonly used in green building. Natural area - Central and Southern Europe, Transcarpathia, in our country - the entire forest and forest-steppe zone. It occurs in two forms - shrub and in the form of trees, reaching 5-6 meters in height. Leaves with smooth edges have a dense texture, resemble an elongated heart in shape, and are painted in an intense green color.

Inflorescences in the shape of a pyramid consist of miniature flowers of light purple color of varying degrees of intensity. Their length is 15-20 cm. They bloom when they reach 4 years of age. In addition to simple flowers, there are fluffy ones with double petals, often large in size with a diameter of 2.5-3 cm. Brushes differ in density and size.

The decorative qualities of wild lilacs are monotonous, especially in comparison with varietal and hybrid forms, the variety of which is truly impressive.

The varieties, whose progenitor was common lilac, thanks to the efforts of breeders, acquired a huge number of colors. So, new colors were added to the shades of the lilac gamut traditional for the representatives of the species - pure pink, blue, purple and even unusual yellow.

Let's list the popular decorative forms.

"Beauty of Moscow"

The original form of inflorescences, formed by one or two large openwork panicles in the form of a pyramid, the lilac of this variety is similar to luxurious polyanthus (multi-flowered) roses. This is a real masterpiece created by nature in tandem with man.

The blossoming double flowers are painted in a delicate pink color, beautifully shimmering with a mother-of-pearl shade. As it blooms, the color changes to snow-white.

"Sensation"

The exclusive advantage of this perennial fast-growing form is the expressive rich purple color of flowers with white-bordered petals. Flowers with elongated broad-oval petals, in which the apex is concave inward, are collected in branched, lush, medium-dense, narrow-pyramidal panicles. The aroma is weak. The bush is vigorous, rare, with slightly spreading shoots.

"Dawn of Communism"

A highly decorative, undersized, abundantly leafy variety created by breeder Leonid Kolesnikov. In large fragrant flowers (up to 3 cm in diameter) of a simple form, the color is purple-red, closer to the center - bright purple. The shape of the petals is elongated, oval, in the stage of full blooming, it becomes spirally curved, as if curling. Inflorescences consist of one pair of broad-pyramidal brushes.

International experts recognized the Dawn of Communism as the best magenta lilac in the world.

"Kremlin chimes"

Another luxurious, memorable form of lilac, bred by L. Kolesnikov. It looks especially decorative in a semi-open state: the neighborhood of bright purple buds and intense purple large flowers impresses with the brightness and freshness of colors. When the petals open completely, they begin to bend in a spiral shape. This is a variety with a complex color - at the blooming stage it is velvety, intensely purple, and then it becomes rich, deep purple, which looks very impressive and unusual.

"RUssia morning"

The breeding of this magnificent fragrant purple variety was carried out by the Russian dendrologist-breeder N.K. Vekhov. The color of the buds is dark purple, the flowers are purple with a mother-of-pearl tint on the tips of the petals.The flowers are large (up to 3.4 cm in diameter), double-shaped, with oval, pointed petals that have different widths. They are collected in paniculate inflorescences in the form of pyramids. The bush is medium-sized, low - up to 2 m, with a very picturesque spreading crown.

The variety is drought and frost-resistant, has a high disease resistance.

"In memory of Ludwig Shpet"

This is the most popular dark colored decorative form of lilac. The color of buds and flowers is complex deep purple with a purple hue. The flowers are simple in shape, 2.2-2.5 cm in diameter, fragrant. In large inflorescences (up to 27 cm in length) there can be from 2 to 5 panicles. The bush is high, straight. The variety is distinguished by stable, exuberant flowering.

Ami Shott

The upper side of large flowers (up to 2.2 cm in diameter) has a blue color with a cobalt tint, the lower side is lighter. The flowers are fragrant, double-shaped, with two closely spaced corollas with broadly oval petals curving in the central part. Large brushes 25x15 cm form slightly ribbed and strong pyramidal panicles (1-2 pairs). Vigorous bush with a wide crown. Medium flowering variety.

Hungarian

The natural area of ​​the wild-growing Hungarian lilac is Yugoslavia, the Carpathians, Hungary. Typical representatives of the species are tall shrubs, growing up to 7 m, with highly branched, upwardly directed shoots. They are easily distinguished from other varieties by their shiny, bare leaves of a dark green color, broadly elliptical, and a tiered arrangement of tubular purple flowers in inflorescences with sparse, narrow panicles. There are two decorative forms of Hungarian: pale with flowers painted in pale purple shades, and red with flowers of red color with a purple tint.

Hungarian lilac is characterized by rapid growth, frost and drought resistance, successful development in almost any climate, including the regions of the North-West and the North of the European part of the Russian Federation. Demonstrates endurance in urban conditions, undemanding to the soil, perfectly amenable to molding, does not give root growth.

It begins to bloom 14 days after the common lilac blooms. Flowering is abundant and lasting 2.5-3.5 weeks.

Persian

A hybrid bred by crossing small-cut and Afghani species of lilacs, cultivated since 1640. Does not occur in the wild. It grows as a shrub with a maximum height of 2 m, the branches of which are highly spreading and have a characteristic arched shape. In young bushes, the pubescence of the branches is weak. The length of the lanceolate leaves is 3-7 cm.

Adult Persian lilac is a bush with a drooping crown shape, thin-stemmed branches in lenticels and many-flowered small branched inflorescences (up to 10 cm in length and up to 8 in width). Panicles with fragrant pink-lilac flowers are ovoid. Persian lilac smells specifically, not like typical representatives of the olive family. Blooms from May to June, fruiting in July-August.

The decorative form "Alba" with simple flowers of pure white color was bred. The variety is characterized by fast growth with an annual growth of up to 35 cm. The bush is large with upright shoots and heart-shaped smooth leaves that remain green all autumn. Drought-resistant, frost-resistant. Used for garden design in private and public areas.

Chinese

A natural hybrid that was discovered in the 18th century on the territory of a botanical garden in the French city of Rouen, the Chinese lilac owes its appearance to the Persian and common species. You can meet a beauty only on the territory of the PRC. It does not grow in the wild. Representatives of the species are tall, multi-stemmed shrubs, reaching a height of 5 m, with a spreading crown.

The branches are drooping thin-stemmed, with pointed-ovate leaves and large fragrant flowers up to 2 cm in diameter.

The color is transitional: the rich purple color of the buds acquires a spectacular reddish hue as it blooms. Loose panicles drooping broadly pyramidal up to 16 cm long. It begins to bloom at the same time as common lilac - from May to June.

Amur mesh

The area is mixed and deciduous forests of the Far Eastern region, the northeastern part of the PRC and the Republic of Korea. In the wild, it grows in the form of a multi-stemmed dense-crowned tree that can grow up to 16-20 m. Cultivated forms are large shrubs, reaching a height of 8-10 m. The color of the bark of young shoots is brown-red, like cherry bushes. Old trunks in frequent white lenticels are colored deep gray, less often brown.

The shape of leaves up to 10 cm long Amur lilac is similar to common lilac. Terry flowers with short pedicels exude an amazing honey aroma. The color of the buds is greenish cream, the flowers are creamy white. Dense inflorescences with 2-4 panicles, directed sideways or upward, reach 20-25 cm in length. The Amur species begins flowering 14 days later than the Hungarian and 21 days later than the common one.

High decorative foliage and fragrant flowers with unusual, very prominent stamens, late long flowering, beautiful autumn outfit - all this made the Amur lilac one of the most demanded plants in landscape gardening. The species has an average shoot-forming ability. Feels good in an urban environment, resistant to negative external factors (dust, air pollution).

Shaggy (hairy)

The area is China, it grows mainly in Hubei and in the north-west of the country in Shanxi. High-stemmed, densely leafy shrub, reaching a height of 4.5 m. In annual forms, the color of young branches is yellowish-gray. They are covered with a delicate short down, which subsequently falls off. In biennials, the branches are yellow-brown and have no edge.

This type of lilac is distinguished by erect, paniculate large inflorescences up to 30 cm long, which are formed at the ends of the branches. The shape of the bristles is narrow in the form of a neat pyramid or regular cylindrical. The color of fragrant flowers is pink with a purple tint.

The flowering period lasts from June to July, fruiting from the second half of July to August. All shaggy lilacs are characterized by excellent winter hardiness.

How to choose?

In one place, a lilac bush can grow for more than 25 years, so the choice of a variety should be balanced and deliberate. The primary criteria for the selection of lilacs, of course, is the color of the flowers. In the international register of varieties of the genus Syringa L., when describing them, the flower shape (simple or double) and the color prevailing in color are indicated, according to which the varieties are assigned a code from I to VIII. Thus, all varieties of lilacs were grouped by color.

  • White. The color group of white lilacs is considered the most successful in terms of ease of color identification, despite the fact that the white range is rich in various shades.
  • Purple - violet color. The group of purple lilacs includes plants with cold, "inky" colors of varying degrees of intensity.
  • Bluish. Lilacs of such shades look especially gentle and touching. The color of the buds is purple of varying saturation; as it blooms, blue color begins to dominate in it.
  • Lilac or purple. A group of lilacs, the color of which coincides with the main color of the representatives of the common lilac species.
  • Pinkish. There are many variations of colors in the pink range from delicate pearl shades to intense pinks with a fading purple. Lilacs from this group, due to their elegant colors, invariably attract attention.
  • Magenta (mauve). This is a group of very beautiful, exquisite lilacs with the most "red" colors among their relatives.
  • Purple. These are lilacs, occupying an "intermediate" position between purple and magenta. Purple varieties, relatively speaking, are "redder" of the first and "blue" of the second.
  • Difficult / Transitional. This color group includes exclusion varieties that do not fit into the general scheme. For example, two-colored lilacs or varieties that radically change color as the buds bloom.

But when using this classification, it must be borne in mind that it is not possible to give a 100% accurate description of the color of lilac due to the inconsistency of this feature. Indeed, even in one inflorescence, the flowers have differences in color: in the buds it is more saturated and bright, and the shades of the lower, previously opened flowers are much paler than in the others.

There are other criteria for choosing a variety.

  • The height of the bush. Lilacs are tall - more than 5 m in height, medium layer - up to 4 m and undersized - 1.5-2 m.
  • Bush shape. They can be erect, spreading, domed, ovoid, spherical crowns.
  • Flower shape - there are many options: a cup, a straw, a saucer, a rose, an asterisk.
  • Flower diameter. With a large over 2.5 cm, with an average of 1-2 cm and a small 0.5-1 cm.
  • The shape of the inflorescences. It happens pyramidal, conical, oval, branched, openwork, dense, drooping, erect.
  • Flowering time. Varieties can be early flowering, flowering period lasts from late April to May, mid-flowering from the second half of May to June, late flowering from late May to mid-June.

In the regions of the middle zone of our country, most species of lilac grow well, which is explained by the high frost resistance of this plant.

Russian gardeners can safely take on the cultivation of common, hybrid, Amur, Hungarian lilacs. The best varieties that will delight you with abundant flowering in the Moscow region and other central regions of the European part of Russia include any decorative forms bred by the master of lilac L.A. Kolesnikov.

Landing rules

Spring and autumn are suitable for planting varietal bushes, large-sized plants (adult plants with a height of more than 2 m), as an exception, can be planted in winter. Following simple rules for planting or transplanting seedlings or layering of lilacs at different times of the year will help her quickly adapt to new living conditions.

  • Autumn planting. Lilacs cannot be transplanted in a vegetative state (flowering period or intensive green mass growth). Before the onset of frost, the bushes should be at rest - the phase of weakening of vital activity - for about a month. The most favorable time for planting is from July 20 to the end of September. Before frost, the transplanted bushes will just take root and will actively grow in the next season. In this case, the young growth gives a good growth, and it is not necessary to take additional care of it.
  • Winter. Krupnomers without fail dig up with the preservation of a large earthen coma. It is problematic to do this without special equipment, so it is most reasonable to use the services of professional planting of large trees.
  • Spring. In this case, it is necessary to have time with planting before the start of sap flow. Planting work can be carried out as soon as the period of early spring frosts ends. The main disadvantage of planting / replanting in spring is that the plants will have to expend much more energy and resources than when planting in autumn. Saplings will have to spend energy not only on taking root and developing a full-fledged root system, but also on reproduction and constant foliage growth. Therefore, you need to be prepared for possible side effects - minimal growth of bushes, their low survival rate and degenerative flowering.

Pre-planting site preparation includes the following types of work:

  • removal of the top layer of the earth;
  • cleaning the landing area from large stones;
  • soil cultivation with an acid reaction with lime at the rate of ½ glass per plant, re-liming is carried out after 7-10 years;
  • fertilizing the soil, it is enriched with organic matter and mineral complexes - manure (compost) in the ratio of 12-15 kg / m2, phosphorus - 50-70 / m2 and potash 25-30 g / m2;
  • digging the earth.

To neutralize the high pH level, wood ash, which has an alkaline reaction, is additionally scattered in the trunks.

This valuable natural phosphorus-potassium fertilizer also helps to convert organic nitrogen into its mineral forms: ammonium, nitrite and nitrate, which are easily absorbed by green organisms.

Selection and storage of seedlings

Previously, buying varietal lilacs was a whole problem, and the likelihood of acquiring exactly the variety you dreamed of was almost zero. The situation has changed for the better with the development of online trade in tree and shrub seedlings. Now, in order to become the owner of your favorite lilac variety, it is enough to study the nursery offers on the network and place an order. The main thing is to choose well-known nurseries with a reputation that guarantee the authenticity of the planting material - its compliance with the variety and varietal qualities, viability and survival rate.

The planting stock sold varies greatly in size and age. Usually it is sold in containers of different capacities - up to 1000 ml for one-year-old seedlings, from 2000 ml and more for two-year-olds. If desired and financially possible, it is quite possible to acquire a large-size dealer.

Before buying lilacs, it will be useful to find out what types of planting material varietal lilacs exist, and how they differ from each other.

  • Own-rooted. They are obtained by green cuttings, propagated by rooting cuttings and semi-lignified shoots. The advantages of such specimens are increased frost resistance, the ability to quickly recover from natural disasters and tremendous durability (over 150 years). These are lilacs with multi-stemmed low bushes, which have high decorative qualities. The absence of rootstock overgrowth simplifies plant care, in particular, frees the owner from multiple pruning during the season. After all, if this is not done, the bushes will weaken.
  • Vaccinated (hybrid). The advantages of grafted seedlings are rapid growth and flowering in the third year of life. Cons - the presence of a crown on only one trunk, low resistance to extreme natural and climatic unfavorable factors, difficulty of care, short life. These are lilacs with a single-stemmed bush, blooming one and a half weeks later than their own rooted seedlings. As a stock, privet, seedlings and shoots of common lilac, Hungarian lilac, bole (tree trunk from roots to crown) are used.

High-quality varietal lilac planting material should be healthy, strong and viable.

There are a number of points to consider when buying seedlings.

  • Development of ground units. Annual trees reach a height of 1 meter, two-year trees - 1, 2-1.5 m.
  • The appearance of the shoots and stem. In healthy seedlings, the shoots should be easily bendable, elastic. The bark is smooth, uniform in color and free from visible defects. It is important that there are no dry growth buds on the stem.
  • The state of the root system. A young growth should have a well-developed and fairly branched root system with a root length of at least 25 cm.
  • Vaccination site. There should only be a clean, characteristic scar. Any damage to this area should be alerted. This is especially true of lilacs grafted on a trunk. A bad sign is a pulled up bark.

It is important not only to choose the right planting material, but also to keep it dormant before landing in open ground:

  • purchased planting material should not be brought into heat, so as not to provoke growth stimulation;
  • seedlings with a closed root system are wrapped in a non-woven covering material and placed in the coolest room possible, ideally this is a cellar, an unheated basement, a garage, a loggia;
  • the soil in the container must be kept moist to prevent the earth from drying out.

Saplings with open roots are buried in a place well protected from the wind. To do this, they dig a hole, which is vertical on one side, and flat on the other. The seedlings are placed with their roots to the sheer side, and the trunks are laid on a flat part at an angle of 45 °. Plants are dug in to the surface of the soil, watered and continue to throw on the ground until a mound 15-20 cm high is formed.

In areas with severe winters, the seedling pit is additionally protected with a covering material.

Disembarkation time and place

Lilac is an unpretentious culture that grows, develops and blooms excellently in different climatic zones with different types of soil. When this does not happen, then the reason may lie in the wrong choice of the site for planting. Let's list the optimal conditions for planting.

  • Smooth open area or area with a gentle slope and a high-quality drainage system. In regions with a cold climate, elevated areas are chosen, since in winter, dormant lilac buds can suffer from damp air stagnant in the lowlands.
  • A place reliably protected from gusts of cold wind and with good natural light. Ideal when the sun shines on the bush in the morning. Lack of sunlight can cause slow growth of the bushes and the loss of their decorative effect - thinning foliage, pulling out shoots.
  • Neutral soil acidity pH 6.7. The excess acid content in the substrate is neutralized by liming.
  • Moderate soil moisture. On low, swampy or regularly flooded soils during spring floods, it grows poorly and develops slowly, reacting negatively to waterlogging of the earth. This is especially true of common lilac and its varieties.
  • The depth of the underground aquifer is at least 1.5 m from the ground surface. In areas with a close location of groundwater, slate is placed in the planting pit, limiting the zone of distribution of rhizomes with a surface layer of soil. In another case, shrubs are planted on fill hills with a circular decorative fence.
  • Fertile, structural soil with high sorption capacity and moisture capacity, saturated with humus. It is optimal when the ground has a porous, loose, earthy-lumpy structure. Lilacs are suitable for light loamy soils, chernozems filled with organic matter and mineral complexes.
  • Distance from other trees. When planted next to dense spreading trees or under them, the lilac will grow frail thin-stemmed with a crown in "bald patches" and rare inflorescences. The distance between lilacs and tall neighbors should be at least 3 meters. For group planting, lilac bushes are also placed in increments of at least 3 m.

In the regions of Central Russia, it is recommended to plant lilacs in open ground in the last weeks of summer until early autumn. It will be difficult for a shrub transplanted in the autumn-spring period to take root, which will negatively affect growth. But since the lilac quickly goes into a dormant state, it is permissible to plant it in the second half of July.

How to reproduce?

Representatives of all cultural forms of lilac are deprived of the ability to repeat parental traits when breeding with seeds. Therefore, they are obtained by methods of vegetative propagation: by grafting, green cuttings or layering.

Layers

This method is considered the simplest, but only suitable for self-rooted lilacs.New bushes are obtained with strong roots, root well, grow quickly, and most importantly, retain all varietal qualities. When the lilac shoots appear, they select several annual shoots, bend them to the ground, pin them and sprinkle them with soil.

The rooted layers are separated from the uterine trunk and transplanted to separate places. Flowering of layering plants can be expected at 3 years of age.

Vaccination

In this way, any type of lilac can be propagated. They are engaged in grafting shrubs in the spring, choosing any method for this: budding (buds-eyes), copulating (cuttings), for the bark. The best stock will be a seedling of the same variety. For the scion, an annual shrub is needed, cut before the buds swell. Before inoculation, the graft is placed in a refrigerator for storage.

Cuttings

This method allows you to obtain own-rooted shrubs. Since lilacs are difficult to root, the success of propagation by cuttings depends on the observance of several conditions:

  • lilacs are propagated by summer (green) cuttings from flowering or just faded plants;
  • shoots for cuttings are taken in the middle of the crown of a young shrub, a maximum of 6 years old;
  • the middle part of the shoots is cut into cuttings 15-20 cm long, which should have 3 pairs of buds and 2 internodes;
  • cuttings root well at t 21-25 ° C and humidity 80-90%.

Procedure:

  • remove the lower leaves with shears;
  • cut the cuttings with an oblique cut as close as possible to the lower node;
  • cut off the leaves remaining on the cuttings by half;
  • departing from the upper node 1 cm, cut off the tops of the shoots with a straight cut;
  • place the cuttings for 15-16 hours in a solution that stimulates root formation;
  • drainage is poured into the planting tank, a layer of soil mixture - peat, coarse-grained perlite in a ratio of 2: 1, river sand - and the substrate is spilled with a fungicide;
  • small holes are made with a pencil, and the cuttings are buried in them so that the lower node is covered with soil;
  • seedlings are sprayed with a spray bottle and covered with polyethylene.

While the cuttings are rooting, it is important to maintain a high level of humidity under the film, remembering to spray the plants daily and ventilate from time to time. Roots appear after 2-3 months.

Plants are transplanted into open ground next spring or fall.

Let's dwell on the key points of planting lilacs.

  1. Preparation of planting holes. Their value depends on the type of soil. If the soil is fertile, then the holes are dug 0.5 x 0.5 x 0.5 m, and when the poor are 1 x 1 x 1 m, they are filled up to the middle with imported fertile soil. When planting in groups, it is important to dig holes at the correct distance, which will depend on the purpose of planting and the characteristics of the varieties.
  2. Fertilization. Immediately before transplanting seedlings into open ground, it is necessary to prepare a nutritious soil mixture: humus (compost) in proportions of 15-18 kg / m2; wood ash - 250 g / m2; bone meal - 1 kg / m2; double superphosphate - 25-30 g / m2. On acidic soil, the application rate of superphosphate is doubled to neutralize the soil.
  3. Preparation of seedlings. Before planting, the seedlings are examined to identify injured or dried roots. They are cut out, and those that remain are shortened to 30 cm. Annual trees need to slightly shorten the crowns by removing 2-3 bud pairs.
  4. Disembarkation. The seedling is placed in the middle of the planting pit, the roots are straightened, and sprinkled with nutritious soil mixture. Slightly compact the trunk circle, and water the ground. After allowing the water to be completely absorbed, a mulching layer 4-7 cm thick is created from peat, humus, rotted leaves or compost. Further, the protective cover is periodically renewed and renewed at least twice a year.

How to care?

Lilac is a culture whose reputation is almost impeccable. She tolerates severe cold and life in cities, where it is dusty and often off-scale air pollution.This plant is undemanding to the soil and adaptive to the lighting regime. But all this does not mean at all that you can take care of lilacs carelessly.

It will delight with abundant, long-lasting, and most importantly, stable flowering only if comprehensive measures are taken to create, maintain and preserve conditions for its normal life.

Top dressing

Lilacs require different approaches to fertilizing during the period after planting in the ground and when the optimal size is reached. Top dressing is prohibited until the plants are fully rooted and before wintering. That is, fertilizers are applied to actively growing lilacs in the first half of the growing season. During the first year from the moment of planting, they do not need feeding. And also young trees do without them.

Exceptions are cases of cultivation in poor land. (clay-sandy soil), where plants may lack the vital compounds required for a full life. In such a situation, the young are fed when young shoots form on the bushes and in the summer, closer to July. In the second year of life, organic matter and nitrogen-containing fat are introduced to any lilacs during early spring feeding.

An adult shrub requires a different feeding regime. Fertilizers begin to be applied at 3-4 years of age with a frequency of 1 time per season, usually with the onset of spring. A nitrogen-containing fertilizer (ammonium nitrate or urea) is applied under the lilacs at the rate of 50 g per bush. When plants enter the flowering phase, feeding is stopped.

Faded bushes are fertilized with organic matter, using cow dung, wood ash. Once every 2-3 years, planting closer to autumn is fed with mineral complexes. For this purpose, phosphorus-potassium fertilizer mixtures of 40-60 g / bush are used, or potassium- and phosphorus-containing compositions are used separately at the rate of 20-30 g per plant.

Any lilacs are responsive to the introduction of organic matter. It is recommended to fertilize young plants with humus from cow dung, grown ones - with diluted bird droppings. Combining organic fertilizers with mineral fertilizers requires a decrease in the one-time application rate by about one and a half times. Top dressing is done in the evening hours and when the weather is cloudy outside, after irrigation events and showers.

Fertilizer mixtures are embedded in the soil or applied in water-soluble form.

Watering

The endurance of lilacs allows it to do without systematic watering. The regularity of irrigation for this plant is, indeed, not fundamental, but this should not be abused. Lilacs are watered throughout the entire period while it blooms, and with the arrival of spring, when shoots begin to actively grow. Of course, this should be done only under the condition of insufficient moisture in the soil in a natural way. In the summer season, at the end of flowering, the bushes are watered only in the heat. Despite its good drought resistance, lilacs require protection from overheating in such weather.

Fight disease

Although lilacs are deservedly considered an amazingly hardy shrub, the possibilities of its immune defense are not unlimited, and, like all plants, it is sick. Cohabitation in the same area with contaminated vegetation and dry or rainy seasons with inadequate care to compensate for the effects of natural disasters can equally cause health problems.

In order not to miss alarming signals, diagnose the disease in time and quickly begin treatment, it is important to systematically conduct a visual inspection of the bushes.

Consider what diseases lilacs most often suffer from, and how to deal with them.

Viral

Bushes can infect the ring spot virus, as evidenced by the appearance on the leaves of a characteristic pattern of green stripes, curved lines or rings. Thickening, twisting, drying of leaves and the formation of yellow spots on the crown are signs of mosaic infestation.In both cases, with extensive damage to the landings, they have to be completely destroyed.

Bacterial

Withering of the tops of young shoots with their subsequent blackening indicates that the plant is affected by necrotic necrosis. Blackening of the buds with further drying and the appearance of brown spots throughout the crown are evidence of a successful attack by parasitic fungi and infection with late blight.

The plantings are sprayed with a Bordeaux mixture three times with an interval of 2 weeks between procedures, or narrowly targeted fungicides are used for treatment.

Fungal

A stunted state, wilting leaves, dying off of shoots starting from the crown are symptoms of verticillary wilting. All affected plants are disposed of by burning.

Lilac also needs protection from pests, especially leaf-eating insects and herbivorous mites. If you do not take measures in time, then due to the lightning-fast spread of phytophages, the bushes can not only lose their decorative effect, but, in general, become bald. The fight against them is carried out using toxic insecticides of systemic intestinal action. Conventional bioprotection drugs of narrowly targeted action cannot cope with this scourge, since during the time that one problem is being solved, weakened plantings will attract hordes of new pests.

Pruning

There is nothing difficult in caring for lilac bushes until it comes to pruning. This shrub needs regular shaping and cleaning to help it acquire a beautiful shape and promote stable flowering. Pruning begins at 3-4 years of plant life when skeletal branches appear. There are several types of this procedure, and each of them solves a specific problem.

To stimulate flowering

All varieties of lilacs, without exception, need it. For abundant flowering in the next season, it is necessary to cut off the faded inflorescences, since the formation of flower buds in these shrubs is possible only on green shoots. This type of pruning should be carried out as soon as flowering ends, and not transferred to autumn or winter.

The result of late autumn pruning is weak flowering, and winter pruning is its complete absence.

For rejuvenation

Required only for adult lilacs or long-lived trees. In the case of timely rejuvenation, it is not necessary to carry out radical rejuvenation, skipping flowering. The rejuvenating procedure is reduced to the annual removal of thickening shoots that interfere with the normal growth of the shrub. The main task is to get a healthy plant with strong skeletal branches and a successful arrangement of 6-10 shoots.

The time for such a procedure is early spring, until the kidneys have awakened. Sometimes very old lilacs still have to be radically rejuvenated by cutting off all shoots and completely removing all thickening branches. The next year it will take lilacs to recover, so if there are panicles, they will be small in size and in small quantities. But subject to competent annual pruning of inflorescences, there will be more and more until the flowering finally becomes regular and abundant.

For crown formation

All lilacs belong to picturesque landscape shrubs, which need to be given a certain outline of the crown only in rare cases. Exceptions are situations when weak, dry, damaged, deformed and growing inward shoots need to be cleaned from root shoots, so that in the future nothing prevents the formation of strong skeletal shoots.

In other cases, crown molding can be carried out for different purposes.

  • To give regular lilac gardens a clear geometry. Young plants are given the direction of growth of the branches, shearing them to limit the growth of the crown and give it a clear silhouette.
  • For the maintenance of hedges / tunnels in which dense bushes require top trimming and regular spring / autumn lateral trimming to shape them.
  • To create a standard shape for lilacs with one central skeletal shoot, when they need to systematically remove lateral branches, plus form the crown in the form of a cloud by limiting the growth of the upper shoots.

How to prepare for winter?

In autumn, summer residents have a lot of things to do on the site - this is harvesting, garbage collection, planting root crops, pruning fruit trees. But behind all these troubles, one must not forget that decorative plantings also need to be prepared for the cold season.

The preparation of lilacs for wintering includes a number of activities.

  • Sanitary pruning of overgrowth. It is carried out after the end of the leaf fall. The bushes are cleaned of all root vegetation, damaged or diseased stems, get rid of dense branches. Cut branches must be cleaned of existing lichens or mosses, which create a favorable environment for the reproduction of harmful insects.
  • Top dressing. Fertilizers are applied in late September or early October before the first frost. Around the bushes, not reaching the root zone by 10 cm, a layer of rotted manure or compost is poured for young plants 10-12 kg per bush, and for adult specimens - 25-30 kg.
  • Preventive treatment against diseases and pests. With the onset of frost, the soil is dug up to freeze the larvae of harmful insects and pathogens. When the leaf fall ends, the entire ground part of the bush is sprayed with 3% Bordeaux mixture or 5% iron sulfate against fungal diseases.
  • Warming of landings. Adult lilac bushes do not really need protection from frost, with the exception of standard forms, which are quite susceptible to cold. For this reason, their trunks are wrapped in burlap or non-woven covering material. Young immature seedlings need to be helped to overwinter by covering the trunks with mulch (dry foliage, peat, humus, sawdust, straw) by at least 10 cm. Hedges made of grown annual plants can simply be covered with snow well.

Examples in garden design

In the photo selection, you can see various options for using lilacs in the design of garden and park landscapes.

Single plants

The standard forms of lilac look very impressive against the background of classic lawns, and adult bushes crowning a small hill look no less attractive.

Creation of garden compositions

There is no equal to the lilac on the trunk. Since the flowering time of standard forms is limited to 3 weeks, in order to preserve decorativeness in garden compositions, various types of low-growing shrubs, dwarf conifers and perennial flowers should be present as coloristic accents.

Group decorative landing

Groups of lilacs are used to fill empty corners or areas of the garden, decorate the background of garden furniture, edging gazebos, pergolas, fountains and artificial reservoirs.

Alley landing

For the decoration of alleys, bush forms of lilacs and options on the trunk are equally suitable. When the task is to create an alley of many species, the persistent wow effect provides a close neighborhood of contrasting varieties.

Hedges

Lilacs are indispensable for creating picturesque free-growing and molded hedges that solve a variety of tasks. Such elements multiply the artistic attractiveness of the site many times over, serve as an element of zoning and wind protection.

As background

          Although lilacs have a short flowering, the intense green color of the leaves will always serve as an excellent backdrop for other vegetation. These can be different types of low-growing variegated ornamental shrubs and large perennials (peonies, phlox).

          For an overview of several varieties of lilac, see the next video.

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