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Hydrangea care help
Hi all, i have three Hydrangea bushes, all in pots, two seem ok but this one has started growing above its blooms 
It got a bit singed in the heatwave but seems ok, few brown tips. Two questions...
1- when do you dead-head a bush like this - the flowers never drop, does the bloom in picture indicate time to DH it?
2 - Stems above the blooms - ignore or take action ?
Thanks for any tips.
Dave


It got a bit singed in the heatwave but seems ok, few brown tips. Two questions...
1- when do you dead-head a bush like this - the flowers never drop, does the bloom in picture indicate time to DH it?
2 - Stems above the blooms - ignore or take action ?
Thanks for any tips.
Dave

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Posts
I take it they're fairly new? You'll probably find they'll need much bigger pots soon, and a good soil based growing medium to keep them happy for future.
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...
No not new, they were my mums and we got them when she passed a couple of years back. Always been in pots, all three are in similar sized pots, i think they are about 14" round.
Sadly we have little space to put in bigger pots and no ground soil at all so they may have to remain a little choked.
I can't simply plant them as we have no usable soil here.
https://www.woodsidegardencentre.co.uk/online-garden-products.asp?productrange=Large-Blue-Glazed-Garden-Pots&textpage=Extra-Large-Blue-Glazed-Round-Garden-Planter&productcode=3929&MainNav=&backpars=productrange=Large-Blue-Glazed-Garden-Pots&textpage=tp-Large-Blue-Glazed-Garden-Pots&sp=true#.YtrRI73TXkw
In long, hot or windy spells, a potted shrub will dry out far more quickly than in the ground, so keeping it in a shadier site will help prevent that, and enable the water you give it to be more beneficial. They prefer shade anyway.
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...
Would the Hydrangea in the post above be happier if I were to drag the chippings off, cut the weed mat and dig a large enough hole - it would likely take a pick-axe to get it broken up and I don't know what sort of spread the conifer roots would have taken.
Maybe the hydrangea could fill that corner well??