Common Lilac. Syringa vulgaris.
Height: 4 m; width: 2,5 m
Modest in growth, but it is important that there is low groundwater. In damp places and soils, the lilac is fading.
Wreath: rounded
Flowers: white, pink, violet; flowering time: VI
Fruit: pod
Foliage: green
The inoculum pyramidal 10-20 cm long. Can be grown as a crown tree.
Large summer green bushes. Grows in good, nutrient-rich, heavy garden soils. Lights demanding, heat resistant.
Grooming
Fertilisation: in the second year after planting, nitrogen-containing fertilisers must be applied. The dose is divided 2-3 times. For the first time, early in spring, then 2-3 weeks later.
Organic fertilisers, e.g. diluted slurry, are also used for supplementary fertilisation. The surface of the fertilising soil shall be irritated prior to application.
Undiluted organic fertilisers, e.g. stifled manure, shall be incorporated into the beds in autumn. Take 10-30 kg of startled manure per adult bush.
The plantations are mulched.
Shaping: for the lilac to blossom magnificently, they must be made regularly. In the first three years after planting, the key is to create strong skeletwards.
The shrub offspring is then regularly cut out and the hops are thinning. The trunks, which are too stretched, shall be lowered to a height of 1-1,5 m.
Restorative trimming: old and overgrown bushes undergo restorative trimming - they are cut off leaving branches ~ 15-30 cm long. New branches develop from the dormant buds, and the bushy wreath is being recreated.
Sow April in a potty. The first sprouts appear in June.
It is important not to sprinkle or grease the volumes.
The seeds are stratified.
Packed seeds ( 3Pcs per pack).