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Celebrating the Exceptional Azalea Season This Year

Amazing Azaleas

Tips for Trimming Your Azaleas and a Look at the Best Varieties for Central Florida Yards

By: Anna Stubbendick, FCHP

As the days grew longer and the weather grew warmer, garden enthusiasts in the Tampa Bay area were treated to an exceptional azalea season this year. Azaleas are a great choice for gardens in central Florida due to their adaptability to our region’s weather and soil conditions. They thrive in acidic, well-draining soil and prefer partial shade, making them a perfect choice for gardens that get some morning sun but are shaded in the afternoon. 

When it comes to selecting azaleas for your central Florida garden, there are many options available. Here are some other popular varieties for our area:

  1. George L. Tabor: This variety is a favorite among gardeners in central Florida for its vibrant pink blooms that appear in the spring and occasionally in the fall.
  2. G.G. Gerbing: This variety has large, pure white flowers that appear in the spring.
  3. Formosa: These varieties have showy purple or dark pink, almost red flowers that bloom in the spring.
  4. Conversation Piece: This unique variety has multi-colored flowers that range from pink to white to lavender, making it a standout in any garden.
  5. Encore Azaleas: Encore azaleas have been an especially popular choice this year because they bloom multiple times throughout the year. These azaleas were developed by a Louisiana nursery and are known for their heat tolerance, disease resistance, and ability to bloom in the spring, summer, and fall.  They are available in a variety in colors.  Most of the Encore Azaleas are either dwarf or semi-dwarf varieties, which make them perfect for small spaces, border plantings, and even containers.  Even better, Encore Azaleas can thrive in the full sun as well as the shadier spots in your yard.

To keep your azaleas healthy, it’s important to give them regular watering during dry periods and to fertilize them twice a year – once in the spring and again in the fall. Additionally, make sure to keep an eye out for pests and disease, such as lace bugs or fungal leaf spot, and take appropriate measures if needed.

Now that the main bloom season is over, it’s time to give your azaleas a good trimming to keep them healthy and looking their best. Trimming your azaleas is essential for maintaining their shape and promoting healthy growth. The best time to trim your azaleas is right after they have finished blooming. Here are the steps to follow:

  1. Remove dead flowers: The first step is to remove the dead flowers from the azalea bushes. Use a pair of pruning shears to snip off the flowers right above the leaves. This will prevent the bushes from putting energy into producing seed pods.
  2. Remove dead branches: Next, inspect the azalea bushes for any dead or damaged branches. Use your pruning shears to cut them off at the base of the branch. This will promote healthy growth and prevent disease from spreading.
  3. Trim back new growth: Finally, trim back any new growth on the azalea bushes that is sticking out beyond the desired shape. Use your pruning shears to cut the new growth back to the desired shape.

In conclusion, azaleas are a beautiful and low-maintenance addition to any garden in our area. With the right care, your azaleas can thrive and provide you with beautiful blooms year after year. Now that the blooms are done, give your azaleas a good trimming and consider adding some Encore varieties to your collection for even more color and beauty throughout the year. Happy gardening!


Anna Stubbendick is a FNGLA certified Horticulture Professional who has worked for Canterbury Farms Nursery & Garden Center since April 2021.  She has worked off and on in the landscape industry for the past 15 years or so.  Anna is a self-confessed “science nerd” who grew up with parents that instilled a love of gardening and all things nature-related.  When not at work, you can usually find Anna and her husband at the soccer fields with their teenage daughter or hiking in the Great Smoky Mountains on vacation.

Lead Them to Water: June is National Pollinator Month

Lead them to water

Pollinators’ water supply can come from the most overlooked sources — from a pool of muddy rainwater to a drop in a spigot.

Photo © Vera Kuttelvaserova | Adobe Stock

Are you doing everything you can to support pollinators? One of the most important things you can do is offer a water source for them, and it’s something you can easily incorporate into your garden or landscape.

Most gardeners get absolutely the most excited about bees, butterflies and hummingbirds. And then people get a little less excited about bats, moths, flies and beetles, but they’re still important pollinators. And the great thing is that what you do to attract one of those pollinators actually supports them all. So, it’s really easy to help them all.

Hummingbirds and bats generally get their water from the nectar that they’re eating. Hummingbird feeders work really well — hummingbirds like them just as much as they like the native plants that provide them with nectar. So, hummingbirds and bats aren’t usually actively collecting water, but butterflies and honeybees do use water sources, and they use them for a variety of reasons.

In some cases, they take the water — and honeybees in particular will actually sip water, and then they’ll take it back to their hive. And they use it as a way to air condition the hive. So, they’ll stand at the front entrance of their hive, and they’ll (it sounds a little unattractive) spit up a little droplet of water and then they’ll fan their wings. And it basically works like a swamp cooler, so they can cool the hive that way. It’s very unique to honeybees.

Other pollinators, especially butterflies, look for a more naturalized water feature in the garden, like a pond with a little waterfall or another established water feature. We’re not talking birdbaths here, we’re talking an aquascape in your yard, like a meandering brook. Butterflies have an additional reason why they access water. And bees do this too, a little bit less so than butterflies, but they’re not looking for just clean waters. They’re actually looking for water with mineral and salt content, and that’s how they get that mineral and salt.

What’s important about water sources for pollinators like honeybees is that it has to be shallow and accessible. If you have a birdbath, for example, that’s not an ideal source of water for pollinators.

Bees can’t swim. They can’t access deeper sources of water safely. And if you are a homeowner that has a swimming pool or a birdbath, you may see that there’s a bee that has drowned in it is because they‘ve gone to try to take the water. They see the water, but they land on it and they can’t swim. For the type of water they need, they have to have a landing pad or kind of like a beach entry almost so that they can easily access that water.

If there’s the slightest drip in your garden faucet, you will sometimes see a bee land by it and then drink from that. And it‘s interesting because that mimics the behavior that they would have in just their natural habitat. Remember, they’re very, very small, so a water source for such a small organism can very often be just the morning dew on the leaves in your garden. And so, it is very common for bees to land on a leaf and then wick up a little drop of dew and that’s sufficient for them. Similarly, if they see that little drip coming out of your faucet, it‘s not uncommon to see a bee there.

Also, if you’re in the garden and you see wet soil or muddy water, you will also see butterflies and bees landing on that and drinking that muddy water because they’re after the nutrients in that. Let’s say you have an automatic sprinkler system — any of that exposed soil that does hold any water would actually become, again, a water source for butterflies and bees that are looking for that mineralized water.

How can you create a better water source for pollinators? Let’s say you have a birdbath. Put some rocks or gravel in it, so what you have is basically rocks with just a teeny bit of water in them so that you can see that the water is accessible from standing on one of those rocks or stones. That actually enables bees to land on a firm surface and then bend over and drink the water. If you’re trying to do a dual-purpose thing and you have a birdbath because you want birds to visit your water source, then you should actually have an alternative for the bees and the butterflies. So it’s not a one size fits all.

You do have to be creative, and you could also really just put out a bowl with some stones in it, even like aquarium gravel or something, and just have a bit of water in it. You could place them at the edges of your garden.

Article excerpt from Garden Center Magazine: June 6, 2022