Hypericum Hidcote: The Perfect St. John’s Wort for Your Garden (Complete Growing Guide)

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Robby

Throughout my career working with people, plants, and landscapes, I have often been puzzled by the lack of interest in certain plants that I personally find exceptionally useful. These plants bridge the gap that sometimes exists between what humans want and what wildlife needs. Below are three of my favorites

Hey garden lovers! I’ve been growing Hypericum Hidcote in my garden for years, and I gotta tell ya – this plant is a real showstopper! Today, I’m gonna share everything I know about this amazing perennial that’ll make your garden pop with gorgeous yellow blooms all summer long.

What Makes Hypericum Hidcote So Special?

Hypericum Hidcote bred in the 1920s at England’s famous Hidcote Manor Garden ain’t your average St. John’s Wort. This compact shrub is basically the rock star of the garden world, and here’s why

  • Stunning yellow flowers (2-3 inches wide) with fancy yellow stamens
  • Blooms from early summer through fall (that’s a LOT of flowers!)
  • Grows 2-4 feet tall and wide
  • Dense, bushy growth that looks neat and tidy
  • Super tough and adaptable
  • Won the Royal Horticultural Society’s Award of Garden Merit (fancy, right?)

Growing Your Own Hypericum Hidcote

Sunlight & Location

Listen up because this is important

  • Full sun is best (6+ hours daily)
  • Part shade works too, but you’ll get fewer flowers
  • Avoid deep shade – your plant won’t be happy!

Soil Requirements

This plant ain’t too picky, but it does have some preferences:

  • pH between 5.5-7.0 (slightly acidic to neutral)
  • Well-draining soil is a must
  • Add compost if your soil’s not great
  • Handles various soil types like a champ

Water & Climate Needs

Here’s the good news – this plant is pretty chill about water:

  • Water regularly first year to establish roots
  • After that? Pretty drought tolerant!
  • Does fine in humid weather
  • Hardy in USDA zones 5-9

Maintenance Tips (The Easy-Peasy Guide)

Pruning

Don’t stress about pruning – it’s super simple:

  • Prune after flowering
  • Cut back up to 1/3 of old stems yearly
  • Can cut to ground in early spring (especially in cold areas)
  • Remove spent flowers for more blooms

Fertilizing

Keep it simple:

  • Apply balanced fertilizer 1-2 times yearly
  • Don’t overdo the nitrogen
  • Add compost in spring

Landscape Design Ideas

Y’all, this plant is so versatile! Here’s how I love using it:

  1. Border Plant

    • Perfect for garden edges
    • Looks amazing in groups
    • Pairs great with purple or white flowers
  2. Container Gardening

    • Use 12-16 inch pots
    • Great for patios
    • Mix with other summer bloomers
  3. Mass Plantings

    • Plant 12-18 inches apart
    • Creates awesome yellow carpet effect
    • Perfect for slopes
  4. Rock Gardens

    • Looks fab cascading over rocks
    • Adds structure and color
    • Low maintenance option

Common Problems & Solutions

While Hypericum Hidcote is pretty tough, there’s a few things to watch for:

  • Root rot: Avoid overwatering and ensure good drainage
  • Leaf spots: Improve air circulation
  • Winter damage: Consider cutting back in early spring
  • Leggy growth: Give more sun or prune regularly

Why I Love This Plant

I gotta say, after years of gardening, Hypericum Hidcote remains one of my faves. It’s like that reliable friend who always shows up and looks great doing it! The long bloom time, easy care, and versatility make it a no-brainer for any garden.

Pro Tips from My Experience

  1. Plant in spring or fall for best results
  2. Space plants properly – they’ll fill in fast!
  3. Mulch to retain moisture and suppress weeds
  4. Divide every 3-5 years to keep plants vigorous
  5. Great for cut flowers – try it in summer bouquets!

Final Thoughts

Whether you’re a newbie gardener or a seasoned pro, Hypericum Hidcote is one of those plants that just works. It’s tough, beautiful, and keeps on giving all season long. Plus, it’s pretty much impossible to kill (trust me, I’ve tried! Just kidding!).

Give this garden superstar a try – your garden will thank you with months of gorgeous yellow blooms and trouble-free growth. And isn’t that what we’re all looking for in a garden plant?

hypericum hidcote st john's wort

Hypericum spp., Golden St. John’s wort

After the riotous beauty of spring, early summer can sometimes seem a bit bereft of bloom. This is the time when the golden St. John’s wort shrubs literally shine. Ok, I guess I’m cheating a bit here because instead of one plant, I’m going to recommend a whole suite of plants. For those more familiar with perennials in the St. John’s wort family, it can be surprising to learn that there are four shrubs in the genus Hypericum native to the eastern US: H. densiflorum, H. frondosum, H. kalmianum, and H. prolificum. Virtually identical to the non-botanist, all four of these shrubs make excellent garden subjects, with kalmianum and prolificum displaying the best cold hardiness. The flowers of H. prolificum are slightly smaller than H. kalmianum, and H. frondosum, but make up for that with a profusion of flowers, hence the specific epithet prolificum.

All of the shrub Hypericum spp. are drought-tolerant and adaptable to a wide range of soil and light conditions, they are low-growing with a neat mounded shape that rarely needs pruning, their aging lower stems display colorful shredding bark, and, perhaps best of all, they are slightly toxic to grazing mammals and therefore highly deer resistant. I have seen them used (though not often enough) in tough commercial zones such as parking lots and sidewalk strips, where they flower profusely.

Midsummer finds the shrubs covered with masses of 1-2-inch golden pompoms, which in turn are often covered by bees gathering pollen. The flowers produce a rounded mass of lengthy stamens that effectively outshine and cover the petals underneath, thus producing the pretty pompom effect. Aside from their sheer beauty, the number of bees that are attracted to the blossoms is just amazing; sometimes the whole bush appears to be buzzing. And these are plants with no nectar, just pollen. The small, simple leaves often display a lovely blue-green color. They are also host plants for the gray hairstreak butterfly and some of our moths.

Fortunately for gardeners, the nursery industry seems to be catching on to the value of these shrubs, which are rapidly becoming more widely available. In a recent search, I noted that three cultivars of Kalm’s St. John’s wort (H. kalmianum) were available, in addition to the more common Golden St. John’s wort (H. frondosum) cultivar known as ‘Sunburst,’ which has been available for the last few years. A word of caution, however: Accept no substitutes! The common exotic shrub, Hypericum ‘Hidcote,’ has been commonly sold in nurseries for several years. It advertises larger flowers because the petals are so much larger than the stamens, completely losing the pompom effect. More importantly, as far as I can tell from limited observation, they do not seem to offer much in the way of pollen. In our garden, all of the native species and their cultivars have been tried and proven true, and I encourage gardeners to find a special place for their golden midsummer blooms.

Halesia carolina, Carolina silverbell

About the time the glistening white blossoms of the native plums (Prunus spp.) and shadbushes (Amelanchier spp.) are fading, along comes a second flush of eye candy. In New York’s Catskill Mountains, where I garden, flowering dogwoods bloom in mid-May, along with the Carolina silverbells, well-named for their silvery-white bell-shaped flowers. These are not tiny bells, but bells large enough to fully engulf bumblebees, and they make quite a stunning display in the landscape. There are also lovely pink varieties. Yes, these small understory trees are southerners but rated to Zone 4, and my personal experience with the trees in upstate New York certainly proves the point.

Halesia also provides benefits for many of our local butterflies, as it serves as a host plant for Eastern tiger swallowtail, mourning cloak, Eastern comma, red-spotted purple, and viceroy. In addition to the aforementioned bees, hummingbirds also enjoy the nectar. Buds and flower clusters are eaten by birds. Natural understory trees, silverbells are quite adaptable as to the amount of sun they need, but as with most flowering plants, the more sun you provide, the more flowers you will receive. The corollary to that rule is that the more sun your plants are exposed to, the more water they may need, especially during the establishment phase. Silverbells are not considered drought tolerant.

The rough bark has attractive streaks and becomes gracefully furrowed with age, revealing orange bark underneath. Interesting winged seedpods appear in autumn and persist through winter. While my observations may not be universally true, the silverbells I’ve seen and photographed have all had an interesting tendency for the branches, rather than reaching out horizontally, to arch upward with the bells suspended below like so many earrings in a jewelry store. This lovely tree has so much to offer, and I continue to be mystified that it is not more widely used.

Hypericum ‘Hidcote’ //⚡Magnificent, Highly Reliable Performer, with BRILLIANT Golden Yellow Flowers


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