Planting, caring for and cutting cranesbills

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Cranesbills are versatile perennials for every garden. Everything you need to know about planting cranesbill and subsequent care can be found here.

Cranesbill Flowers
The flowering cranesbill can be planted in any garden and in pots [Photo: Eileen Kumpf/ Shutterstock.com]

cranesbills (geranium) are adaptable and robust perennial plants that are suitable for every garden and even for the balcony. We give helpful tips on site selection, planting and care of Cranesbill.

contents

  • Plant Cranesbill
    • The right location for Cranesbill
    • Instructions for sowing and planting
  • Cranesbill care
    • watering and fertilizing
    • Cut cranesbill
  • Common pests and diseases
  • Is cranesbill hardy?

Plant Cranesbill

When planting cranesbills, it is important to pay attention to the optimal location, the correct planting distance and soil cultivation. We have put together the most important aspects.

The right location for Cranesbill

Depending on the species, cranesbills have completely different demands on the location. In general, a good spot for cranesbills is part shade to full sun on well drained, well drained, humus rich soil. Good drainage is necessary for most species for planting cranesbills in tubs and on very heavy soil, as waterlogging is not tolerated. Incorporating compost can improve both overly sandy and clayey, compacted soils. A high organic matter content is crucial. Because the addition increases both the water storage capacity and the soil aeration. If mature compost is not available, we recommend using a compost-rich, high-quality potting soil such as ours

Plantura organic potting soil. It is specially designed for flowering plants and is therefore ideal for planting cranesbills - whether in a pot or in a bed.

Combine Cranesbill: Low, ground-covering cranesbills can be ideally planted with Gypsophila (Gypsophila), spring pink (Dianthus plumarius) and low grasses, but also with Verbena (verbena) combine. Tall perennials such as the magnificent geranium (Geranium ibericum x platetetalum) thrive particularly well in front of trees or in combination with white flowers roses (pink), lady's mantle (Alchemilla mollis) and prairie perennials such as Rudbeckie (Rudbeckia) and mock coneflower (Echinacea).

Cranesbill in the shade
Cranesbill can be combined well with roses or lady's mantle [Photo: Olga Glagazina/ Shutterstock.com]

Instructions for sowing and planting

Cranesbills are available in nurseries or garden centers as container plants in various sizes. A few Cranesbill species and varieties like the blood cranesbill (Geranium sanguineum) are also available as seeds. Since most cranesbills self-sow generously, breeding cranesbills by seed is rarely necessary. Cranesbill seeds are cold germinator. They can only germinate after a cold period of several weeks. After cold treatment in the refrigerator or outdoors, the seeds are sown about 1 cm deep in nutrient-poor growing substrate on the window sill between January and March. For this we recommend our Plantura Organic Herb & Seed Soil. The whole thing is kept moist and germinated at 15 to 20 °C. The young plants can be planted out in the spring after they have hardened. The ideal time to plant cranesbills is in spring or late autumn, between October and the first frost. Young and sensitive plants should be planted in the ground in early spring from March.

Cranesbill Plants
Cranesbills are suitable for planting in small groups, so that a dense stand forms over time [Photo: Olga Glagazina/ Shutterstock.com]

Cranesbills can be placed well in small groups of 10 to 15 plants, which later form a dense population. In the case of ground-covering, short-growing varieties, 15 to 25 plants are expected, with larger individual perennials around 4 to 8 plants per square meter. The planting distance from cranesbill to other perennials is 30 to 50 cm. If you want to plant cranesbills, you should first prepare the soil well. Weeds on the future planting area should be removed and the soil loosened up over a large area and about spade-deep. Now dig a planting hole for each cranesbill, which is about 1.5 times the size of the root ball. Carefully lift the perennial out of the pot, loosen the root ball with your fingers and place the cranesbill in the ground. The perennials should sit at the same level of soil as they did in the container. Now fill the planting hole with substrate, press lightly all around and then water extensively. If cranesbills are placed in buckets or plant troughs, there should be a drainage layer in addition to good water drainage to avoid waterlogging. A layer of expanded clay, gravel, larger stones or sand 5 to 10 cm high allows excess water to drain away quickly after watering or rain.

tip: Transplanting Cranesbill may be necessary for self-seeding varieties. First prepare the planting holes for the young perennials before you carefully lift them out of the ground with a hand shovel and the roots should be as complete as possible. Now move the young cranesbills to the new location.

Summary: Sowing and planting cranesbills

  • Sowing: Sow 1 cm deep in potting soil between January and March
  • Timing: plant out in spring or late autumn
  • Planting distance: 15-25 plants per m2 in short-growing varieties; 4-8 plants per m2 with larger individual perennials; 30-50 cm distance to other perennials
  • Cranesbill in a pot: fill in a drainage layer of expanded clay, gravel, stones or sand
Cranesbill in the sun
Spring is the best time to fertilize cranesbill [Photo: Manfred Ruckszio/ Shutterstock.com]

Cranesbill care

So that the adaptable and vigorous perennials quickly feel at home in the garden, you will find the most important tips for caring for cranesbills below.

watering and fertilizing

In the first few weeks after planting and in the pot, you should water your cranesbills regularly. Once the cranesbill has grown, it only needs watering in the hot and dry summer months.

Cranesbills are frugal perennials and wild plants that also thrive on poor soil. Fertilization is only necessary once a year and makes sense in the spring when the leaves sprout. We recommend a predominantly organic long-term fertilizer like ours Plantura organic flower fertilizer. Thanks to its special composition, it promotes flowering and strong green foliage. The granules are spread around the perennials in spring and worked into the surface. Over the course of three months, soil organisms release the nutrients contained and feed them slowly and gently to the plant roots.

Cut cranesbill

Autumn is the right time to prune the cranesbill, with the exception of the evergreen species and varieties. The foliage begins to wither and die off completely in late fall. For aesthetic reasons and to avoid fungal infections, it is advisable to cut off the dead leaves. Alternatively, leave the foliage as winter protection until early spring and cut back just before new growth.

Should you prune cranesbill after flowering? Some types and varieties of cranesbill can form a second flower a few weeks later if they are cut back after flowering. They are called reblooming perennials. In the case of high-growing cranesbills, such as the magnificent cranesbill, pruning back after flowering can increase stability. Uncontrolled seeding can also be prevented by cutting directly after flowering. The plants should be cut back completely to a height of a hand's breadth.

Cranesbill after pruning
By cutting back after flowering, uncontrolled seeding of cranesbills can be avoided [Photo: tamu1500/ Shutterstock.com]

Common pests and diseases

Cranesbill is rarely attacked by diseases. In wet years and with more sensitive varieties, however, occurs more frequently mildew on. However, leaf-eating pests can cause greater damage to cranesbills. These include leaf bugs (Heteroptera), the ridged vine weevil (Otiorhynchus sulcatus) and the larvae of the cranesbill sawfly (Protoemphytus carpini).

Cranesbill in the pot
Cranesbill in the pot should be provided with winter protection so that the roots do not freeze [Photo: Raicho Minev/ Shutterstock.com]

Is cranesbill hardy?

Most cranesbills are hardy. Depending on the species, however, the frost hardness differs significantly. For example, while the meadow cranesbill (Geranium pratense) can withstand temperatures down to -40 °C, some delicate hybrid varieties only survive temperatures below zero to a maximum of -12 °C. Therefore, pay attention to the requirements of your plant and cover sensitive varieties with a protective layer of leaves if necessary. Stork's beak in the bucket should be given insulating protection with fleece, jute or needle branches around the pot so that the root ball does not freeze through. Varieties that are sensitive to cold can be overwintered frost-free in the cellar or shed in harsh winters. In the winter time, watering should be extremely reduced and no fertilizer should be applied until new growth occurs.

Adaptable, ground-covering perennials for the shade or semi-shade are, besides cranesbill, also the dainty flowering ones elf flowers (epimedium). We present the most beautiful species and varieties and give tips on planting and care.

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