Care guide

Caring for Hazelnut

Complete guideCorylus avellana

hazelnut needs low maintenance, a position in full sun or partial shade on loam / clay soil / chalky soil and moderate.

Hazelnut (Corylus avellana)
Foto: Onbekend / Wikimedia Commons / Public domain

Position

Sun exposure

full sun, partial shade

Soil type

loam, clay soil, chalky soil

Water needs

moderate

Feeding

Feed in March.

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Year-round care

Hazelnut is a low-maintenance shrub once established. Water regularly during the first growing season to help roots settle in, especially during dry spells. After that, hazelnuts have moderate water needs and generally cope well with typical rainfall in temperate Europe, though prolonged summer drought during nut development (July and August) can reduce crop size. Water deeply every two weeks in dry weather rather than little and often. Feed once a year in March with a balanced general-purpose fertiliser or a handful of blood, fish, and bone scattered around the base of the plant and lightly forked in. Alternatively, top up the mulch layer each spring with well-rotted compost or manure, which feeds the soil as it breaks down. Avoid high-nitrogen feeds, which promote leafy growth at the expense of nuts. Hazelnuts are fully hardy (zone 4a–8b) and need no winter protection. Mulching in autumn helps suppress weeds, conserve moisture, and improve soil structure over time. Keep the mulch a few centimetres away from the stems to avoid encouraging rot or rodent damage. Common pests include grey squirrels, which strip ripe nuts before you can harvest them; netting or early picking in late September is the only real defence. Nut weevil larvae occasionally hollow out developing nuts; collect and destroy any that drop prematurely. Powdery mildew can appear on leaves in dry summers but rarely causes serious harm. Good airflow from sensible pruning and spacing reduces fungal problems significantly.

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