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Hellebore ‘Stained Glass’. This is sadly the only one you’ll find named on here. #failure

Leaf Spot

OK – there’ll be lots pictures of flowers, but let’s have a question to go with them: should we remove hellebore leaves in the autumn (or maybe later?) so the flowers can show off without them? And maybe that way you’ll also reduce or get rid of the dreaded hellebore leaf spot.

I went to look for leaf spot, to get you a picture. None of the plants (and there are a good many) in the garden offered me any for a pic. I found some in a seed tray in the nursery though:

So – am I just lucky to have so little leaf spot? The RHS suggest we should remove all affected leaves, or use various chemical controls. Here’s another nice picture to cheer you up after that dire news. Later addition: I have been told this is not leaf spot and I now have no idea what leaf spot looks like. But here’s the expert take on it.

Amazing colour. Photographed at Ashwood Nurseries

Now here’s a confession. I have had hellebore leaf spot. Or at least I have left leaves with leaf spots on the plants and even let them die and rot off. I have no idea why my multitude of hellebores is still thriving, but it is. Make of this what you will.

A random hellebore pic.

I also get a virus on my hostas and have been advised before now to dig the affected ones up and burn them. Or, alternative approach, feed them. I have done neither and my hostas have survived and return annually, often surprisingly spotless. Strangely, we still sometimes get the virus. It seems to pop up on different plants rather randomly.

Now, you must realise this is not advice. I just am a lazy gardener and I am reporting the results, as they happened, in my garden/climate/country. OK? Another pic…

More Ashwood Nursery Hellebores.

Next question: do we like our hellebore flowers naked?

Some people are quite sure about this and they are the ones who take the leaves off the plants even if the leaves are immaculate. That always makes me nervous – I tend to think plants shed leaves when the leaves have served their purpose and if they still have happy leaves those leaves are probably doing something useful.

And I am not really sure that I like the bare, sticky up look of a shorn hellebore. But I realise as I search for a photograph of some (in vain) that there are differences amongst them that must make a difference to how they appear with no leaves. For example:

These are quite stalky. But these

being more floriferous, and having quite a lot of leaf around the flower, look less gaunt.

This one is very stalky and I find looks best from above

My emerging point is that perhaps ideally hellebores would be treated individually, because some may look better with their leaves and some look all right without. The one above is just not very leafy. These are leafy:

and I like seeing them with their leaves.
What do you think?

Useful hint – think mouse before you keep hellebores in your greenhouse, the better to enjoy them at a nice height. Mice et mine.

And here’s some more hellebore pics, because you’ve been good. Xxx

Ashwood again. Good way to display the flowers and to enjoy them indoors.
A name! A name! = Double, Credale Strain.
Ashwood Nurseries on Veddw site
Ashwood Garden Hybrid at Veddw Copyright Anne wareham
Ashwood Nurseries on Veddw site
hellebore at Veddw copyright Anne Wareham
One of my favourite photographs.

That’s it, folks!

Anne Wareham, portrait Copyright Charles Hawes

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