Chinese Wisteria - Knowledgebase Question

Southfield, MI
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Question by gagern
July 31, 2006
I have one of your Chinese Wisteria. I have had it for 2 1/2 years. It has never bloomed. It seems healthy with green folage and new growth every year and throughout the growing season. Can you advise me about what might be wrong. Thanks


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Answer from NGA
July 31, 2006
Sometimes it just takes a few years for Wisteria to become established enough to bloom so you may not be doing anything wrong at all. You might be able to help things along by pruning your wisteria annually (during the winter months) and by withholding fertilizer. Too much nitrogen will result in lots of lush, green growth at the expense of blooms. Wait until January or February and prune by cutting back or thinning out side shoots that grow from the main (or structural) stem. If your plant has multiple stems it's okay, it just means that your wisteria will produce lots and lots of side shoots. Anyway, remove some of the side shoots and shorten the others. Leave 2-3 buds on each of the shoots that you're cutting back. During the summer months you can cut back some of the long streamers that tend to tangle themselves into the rest of the plant. If your wisteria fails to bloom the spring after you've pruned, you can get its attention by doing a little root pruning. This will shock it into performance. Just take a spade and make cuts straight down from the soil surface into the root zone. Hope these suggestions help!

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