To transplant hollyhocks, pull the plant out of the ground, store the plant in a bucket of water, and replant as soon as possible. Cover the roots and leave the stem of a hollyhock plant exposed when planting with instructions from a sustainable gardener in this free video on gardening.
9 Comments
Someone needs a modern haircut. She looks like a homeless Brit.
Uh… Hollyhocks don't have BULBS – never have, never will. Not a single variety of HH has bulbs. They are perennials. You are clearly mistaken.
Ms. Pruitt – hair can be easily cut, styled, and colored. Good manners and kindness take time to cultivate.
Thanks for the video. It answered my questions about transplanting hollyhocks.
Thank you. Somehow I thought they couldn't be transplanted (I got the wrong idea they had a tap root that didn't survive movement). I have one hollyhock that just formed a short bush with huge leaves but it never blooms. It's under the eave of my house and only gets afternoon sun. I'll try transplanting to a better spot and see what happens.
I just moved my hollyhocks, last year it reached about 7 or 8 feet it was huge and so beautiful!! It was happy where it was but where I had it wasn't working cause it got way too big. I had a hard time cutting the super thick roots, those were about 2 inches diameter!. I hope it survives the transplanting 😥😓
Thank you this was very helpful.
Does holly hock just came in bulbs.
Thank you. I moved the hollyhocks after your video and it just worked fine.