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Jul 23, 2017 6:52 AM CST
Thread OP
Name: Chris Pollock
Copperas Cove, Tx (Zone 8a)
Adeniums Cactus and Succulents Dog Lover Greenhouse Hibiscus Plumerias
Seed Starter Region: Texas Garden Ideas: Level 2
I've got a small bed with about 6 or so bearded Iris's in it that I want to relocate to a better place. They've been there for years and just haven't bloomed like we expected them to. Not one single bloom this year so far and maybe just a couple last year. When, how and where would be the best place to relocate these? Currently they're on the south side of the house between it and a crepe myrtle tree that shades them some of the day. Our soil is not that good either mostly clay.

Any advice would be appreciated.
Chris - Linux since 1995
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Jul 23, 2017 9:22 AM CST
Name: Jan Wax
Mendocino County, N. CA (Zone 9a)
I'm a semi-retired studio potter.
Irises Hummingbirder Hellebores Organic Gardener Dog Lover Daylilies
Region: Ukraine Region: California Dahlias Garden Art Cat Lover Vegetable Grower
Amending the soil with compost is one good way to boost iris blooms, in my experience, Chris.
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Jul 23, 2017 10:45 AM CST
Thread OP
Name: Chris Pollock
Copperas Cove, Tx (Zone 8a)
Adeniums Cactus and Succulents Dog Lover Greenhouse Hibiscus Plumerias
Seed Starter Region: Texas Garden Ideas: Level 2
Thanks Jan, that's what I intended to do I'm just wondering if this would be a good time to move them. I've got some garden phlox and some curcuma that I want to put where they presently are.
Chris - Linux since 1995
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Jul 23, 2017 12:37 PM CST
Name: Jan Wax
Mendocino County, N. CA (Zone 9a)
I'm a semi-retired studio potter.
Irises Hummingbirder Hellebores Organic Gardener Dog Lover Daylilies
Region: Ukraine Region: California Dahlias Garden Art Cat Lover Vegetable Grower
I'm moving things around, Chris. Watering them a lot to get them going in this heat. Cooler weather is better for moving plants, I think.
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Jul 23, 2017 2:09 PM CST
Thread OP
Name: Chris Pollock
Copperas Cove, Tx (Zone 8a)
Adeniums Cactus and Succulents Dog Lover Greenhouse Hibiscus Plumerias
Seed Starter Region: Texas Garden Ideas: Level 2
Thanks Jan, I'll have to figure out what to do with the other plants then until it cools off which will probably be in Oct.
Chris - Linux since 1995
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Jul 23, 2017 5:25 PM CST
Name: Bonnie Sojourner
Harris Brake Lake, Arkansas (Zone 7a)
Magnolia zone
Region: United States of America Region: Arkansas Master Gardener: Arkansas Irises Plant and/or Seed Trader Moon Gardener
Garden Ideas: Master Level Dragonflies Bulbs Garden Art Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Gardens in Buckets
I think moving irises when they go dormant in the heat is better for the plant. The heat is hard on the plant mover. Usually vendors dig and ship in July Aug and some in Sept. most of the vendors that I do business with like to ship from late July thru mid or late aug. this is usually after the spring bloom and full growth of leaves.

After the hotter months, and the irises break dormancy, you will see a period of growth before winter.
Thro' all the tumult and the strife I hear the music ringing; It finds an echo in my soul— How can I keep from singing?
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Jul 23, 2017 6:41 PM CST
Thread OP
Name: Chris Pollock
Copperas Cove, Tx (Zone 8a)
Adeniums Cactus and Succulents Dog Lover Greenhouse Hibiscus Plumerias
Seed Starter Region: Texas Garden Ideas: Level 2
That's what I've read today also Bonnie and you're right it's going to be hard on me, the mover. I need to get this done so I can get the other two plants in place of them. I just need to find a really good spot to put the Iris's.
Chris - Linux since 1995
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Jul 23, 2017 8:12 PM CST
South central PA (Zone 6a)
Irises Region: Pennsylvania
All good advice Chris.
If you are moving entire clumps you can move them almost any time after they are scheduled to bloom; just use a spading fork and lift the entire clump and place in the new hole but press in the dirt around the roots and keep the rhizomes at the surface. I then take the excess dirt from the new hole and place it into the old one. Amending with compost is a big help, and use a basic fertilizer once a year in the spring, but not with high nitrogen like that for sod. Water them in maybe 3 times a week for two weeks or so to get roots started and air pockets filled with soil. Clay can grow irises! I place "raw" compost between the rows/clumps; the roots grow into it as it decomposes.
Good luck with them; you should see improvement even by next season.
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Jul 23, 2017 8:25 PM CST
Thread OP
Name: Chris Pollock
Copperas Cove, Tx (Zone 8a)
Adeniums Cactus and Succulents Dog Lover Greenhouse Hibiscus Plumerias
Seed Starter Region: Texas Garden Ideas: Level 2
Thanks for the advice Dave. Now if it would just cool down some so I can get this done. I starred your reply so I can refer back to it.
Chris - Linux since 1995
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Jul 24, 2017 3:49 PM CST
Los Altos, CA (Zone 9b)
Irises Region: Ukraine
Excellent advice, Dave, and a good reminder for me as I move my iris around.
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Jul 25, 2017 3:38 AM CST
Name: Tom
Southern Wisconsin (Zone 5b)
Butterflies Vegetable Grower Keeper of Poultry Irises Keeps Horses Dog Lover
Daylilies Cat Lover Region: Wisconsin Celebrating Gardening: 2015
I've done that too, and it works good if the clump isn't over grown. Sounds like your clumps might need to be thinned a bit if it's been 5 or 6 years. Over crowded rhizomes will often not bloom well or at all. Smiling
Politicians are like diapers, they need to be changed often, and for the same reason.
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Jul 25, 2017 7:02 AM CST
South central PA (Zone 6a)
Irises Region: Pennsylvania
Good reminder Tom. Overcrowded rhizomes don't do well. My first iris moving adventure was to remove a "clump" of Mary Frances from a neighbor's place which was in a 3' by 4' area but had over 300 rhizomes in that "clump" and had not been touched since planting about 7 years earlier. I could not plant that many so just let a huge part of that clump just sit on the ground in a garden bed; they grew fine putting roots into the unprepared soil below. Made for lots of giveaways over the next 2 years!
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