Last year I wrote a post called Witch Hazel Woes, bemoaning my perpetually non-blooming Chinese Witch Hazel tree (Hamamelis mollis). I outlined a plan I hoped would change that situation, and now I’m happy to report it has!
My witch hazel is blooming better than it has in any of the thirty or so years since I planted it. There are flowers on almost every branch.

I think methodical and effective watering using the deep pipe irrigation technique did the trick. As per the plan, I installed three 50 cm long sections of plastic pipe with holes drilled into it into the tree’s root zone. The idea was to deliver water deeper than could be done with a soaker hose. Into each of those three pipes I estimate I poured 60 liters of water per week during July, August, and September. That’s 180 liters x 12 weeks. More than 2,000 liters! My water bill increased accordingly.
Was it worth it? Yes!

Will I do it again this year? Yes, except I will start sooner. By the beginning of June, probably. Before the tree’s leaf-edges turn brown.
I recognize that the plant is growing in a sub-optimal spot, so will never perform like another one in the vicinity, with copper-coloured flowers (probably the variety called “Jelena”). That one is sufficiently distant from other trees and has a professionally installed watering system at its service. There’s no comparison between it and my sorry specimen, but at least I’ve figured out how to help mine do as well as it can be expected to.

(I’ve discovered it’s not easy to take good photos of a plant with widely-distributed flowers on leafless branches. The camera tends to focus on the background. And small flowers silhouetted against the brightness of the sky don’t show up well either.)
All photos by Audrey Driscoll.






















