Heuchera care and growing guide: expert tips for coral bells
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Heuchera care and growing guide: expert tips for coral bells

Jan 31, 2024

Expert advice on growing easy-going heucheras for brilliant flowers and foliage

Heucheras are some of the most beautiful and fascinating plants to grow in lightly shaded areas of your yard.

Also called coral root and coral bells, the best heuchera varieties are renowned for the vivid colors and patterns of their leaves, from acid green to orange, silver and deepest burgundy, and the slender stems of bell-shaped flowers that appear above them, usually in shades of pink, cream and white.

Heucheras are related to tiarellas, also known as foamflowers, and some breeders have hybridised the two and called them Heucherellas. These also come in many colours and are worth investigating.

Heuchera 'Paris' is grown for its attractively marbled green leaves and tall stems of cerise flowers

Heuchera 'Purple Palace' is a vintage variety still popular today

Heucheras grow best in rich but well-drained soil types or in a container of well-drained potting soil, such as Wonder Soil, available on Amazon.

They are perfect for a low-maintenance garden border, but they hate having 'wet feet' and will soon fade away in constantly damp ground.

So if your soil is heavy and holds water, either grow heucheras in planters or improve your soil and its drainage by adding lots of grit and well-rotted manure such as Wholly Cow on Amazon.

Neutral or slightly acid soil suits them best and they will usually take a little lime.

Because their leaves add color and interest for most of the year, heucheras are one of the best shade plants – though they prefer dappled sunlight and light shade to the deep shade found under a dense tree canopy.

Plant your heuchera in sun or dappled shade in free-draining soil

Heucheras should be planted between May and September in borders, containers or baskets (because they keep their leaves all year they work well in winter hanging basket ideas). They are also well worth including in ideas you may have for a living wall.

To plant in the soil, follow these simple instructions:

The same method applies when adding heucheras to a container or basket, though it is best to spread a gravel mulch over the top of the pot, such as this decorative grit topping on Amazon.

This looks attractive, helps conserve moisture in the potting soil and deters the common pest black vine weevils from laying eggs in the container.

Heucheras look good in containers as part of a planting scheme or as a single statement plant

Heucheras are pretty low-maintenance and need little aftercare once planted, apart from keeping their soil or potting compost damp while they settle in and deadheading their flowers as they fade.

Make sure you avoid one of the most common watering mistakes of getting moisture on heuchera leaves as this can cause fungal diseases and rotting. If this happens, cut off affected leaves before they spread disease to the rest of the plant. Once established, heucheras should only need watering during extended dry periods.

Freezing ground in winter can cause heucheras to suffer from a condition called 'frost heaving', when they are lifted from the ground by frost.

To prevent this happening, mulching with a weed-free organic mulch of composted manure, wood chip or bark chips around the plants in the fall will help insulate the soil.

As plants start to grow again in spring, feed with a general fertilizer such as Miracle Gro Shake n Feed available on Amazon. Water it into the soil or compost and mulch again with well-rotted farmyard manure or compost.

Varieties with small flowers should have them snipped off below the level of the foliage to improve their look. Then cut back all the top growth in early spring to encourage fresh new growth.

In fall, mulch heucheras with wood or bark chippings or well rotted manure or compost to prevent them being forced from the ground by frost

Over time and as they mature, heucheras can develop woody centers that become unproductive and unsightly.

This can affect the plant's performance, and affects many varieties of perennial plants. The easiest way of curing the problem (and making more plants at the same time) is dividing plants in early spring. This is easy to do and the resulting plants will be identical to their parent.

Another way of propagation is to remove the side crowns from mature plants in late summer and plant them in small containers of potting soil until they have grown large enough to be planted into the yard or a larger pot.

This may be later in the same year in warmer zones, or next spring if you live in a colder area. If this is the case, overwinter your young plants in your greenhouse, watering them sparingly.

Divide older, unproductive clumps of heuchera by carefully pulling off side shoots and potting them up

There are only a few things that will trouble your heucheras.

If they are planted in too sunny an area of your yard their leaves can scorch. If this turns out to be the case after planting, either dig them up and move them somewhere shadier or, if they are in a planter, move it out of full sun.

If you're growing your heucheras in a planter, grow them with other shade-loving container plants and avoid sun-lovers.

Another problem is the fungal disease heuchera rust, a common problem that shows as small brown spots on the top of the leaves and orange pustules underneath, which may turn grey in humid conditions.

You can help avoid heuchera rust by buying healthy plants and giving them plenty of space to grow, with good airflow around them. Remove, bin or burn any leaves immediately you spot signs of infection (never add diseased leaves to the compost heap), and water carefully to avoid wetting the foliage.

If the problem persists you may need to treat your heuchera with a fungicide spray such as this one Bonide spray on Amazon. Follow the manufacturer's instructions carefully and do not over-use.

The most common pest of heuchera is the black vine weevil, or taxus weevil, that advertises its presence by biting chunks out of the side of the leaves.

It is the small black adult insects that damage the leaves, and the damage is mainly cosmetic, but their grubs cause more serious problems.

The small, creamy C-shaped grubs, with distinctive orange heads, eat the roots so you can't see the damage being done. It is only when your heuchera inexplicably starts to wilt that you realise there is a problem – and by then it may be too late. In the worst cases, the entire crown of foliage comes away from the roots completely.

There are now organic, biological treatments that can solve the problem although often the first thing to do is dig up the infested plants, and the soil on the roots, and discard or burn.

If you prefer to go down the biological treatment route you can buy nematodes, such as these by BioLogic Scanmask on Amazon. A natural parasite of many pests, they are microscopic eelworms that are safe to use around pets and children and are watered onto the soil throughout the growing season.

The larvae of black vine weevils do tremendous damage unseen under the soil

The experts at the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station at Rutgers University, have been researching deer resistance.

After extensive research they have assessed the resistance to deer browsing of many garden plants and have rated heucheras, coralbells, as Seldom Severely Damaged.

This is the second most deer resistant plants category so although there are plants which are rarely severely damaged, heucheras are left alone in most gardens.

Many heuchera varieties produce flowers carried above the leaves on upright stems. Often these flowers are small and insignificant and have little appeal, although they are popular with pollinators, and simply distract attention from the appeal of the many foliage colors and patterns.

That is why it is often recommended that the flowers be snipped off when still in bud. It is important to snip them off carefully, below the level of the leaves, so that the remains of the stems are hidden.

Because the stems are slim and require careful cutting, you might find it easiest to use a pair of narrow-bladed garden snips, like this small pair by Vivosun on Amazon.

Some varieties, however, have larger and more colorful flowers and these should be left uncut.

This is not unusual, but it detracts from the look of the plant and is a sign that attention is needed.

The simplest approach is to dig up the whole plant in spring, or late summer, improve the spoil and then replant with those bare woody stems below soil level. They will produce roots and a large new plant will be the result.

Better, is to divide the plant into pieces – each with both leaves and roots. These can be replanted in the same site, or elsewhere.

Finally, you can also snip off individual side crowns and either replant them straight away – most should root – or grow them on in pots for few months in a sheltered place.

Heucheras live for many years and because of the strongly colored foliage are excellent companions for many plants. Those with purple leaves look wonderful paired with the best tropical garden varieties such as canna lilies, and their spreading habit makes them excellent as ground cover plants.

Their bold colors are also suitable for a shaded gravel garden and contemporary planting schemes.

Ruth is the gardening editor of Amateur Gardening magazine, the UK's oldest weekly magazine, and a regular contributor to Homes and gardens. She is horticulturally trained and has qualifications from the Royal Horticultural Society. Ruth spends her working days writing about and photographing the gardening jobs that our readers should be carrying out each week and month, and tests many new products that arrive on the gardening market.

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