Struikheide (Calluna vulgaris)
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Struikheide

Calluna vulgaris

Engels: Heather

shrubEricaceae🇳🇱 InheemsWintergroen

Struikheide (Calluna vulgaris) is a native to the Netherlands, evergreen shrub from the Ericaceae family that grows up to 60cm tall. This plant thrives in full sun and requires low maintenance. Blooms in late summer and autumn with pink, purple, white flowers and attracts bees and butterflies.

Hoogte

20–60 cm

Breedte

40–80 cm

Zonligging

full sun

Waterbehoefte

low water needs

Grondsoort

sandy soil, peat soil

Onderhoud

low maintenance

Bloeitijd

late summer, autumn

Bloemkleuren

pink, purple, white

Ecologische waarde

Trekt bijen aan
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Verzorgingskalender

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Care tips

Planting

Heather thrives in full sun and demands acidic, free-draining soil—ideally sandy or peaty ground with a pH below 6.5. If your garden soil is neutral or alkaline, heather will struggle and eventually fail, so test before planting or grow it in containers filled with ericaceous compost. Avoid heavy clay unless you can improve drainage significantly with sharp sand and organic matter. The best planting windows are March to May and September to October, when the soil is workable and plants can establish roots before temperature extremes. Space plants 40 cm apart; they will knit together into a low, weed-suppressing mat within two to three years. Dig a hole slightly wider than the root ball but no deeper—heather roots are shallow and dislike being buried. Tease out any circling roots gently, place the plant so the top of the root ball sits level with the surrounding soil, then backfill with the excavated soil or ericaceous compost if your native soil is marginal. Water thoroughly after planting to settle roots, even though heather has low water needs once established. A 5 cm mulch of composted bark or pine needles helps retain moisture, suppresses weeds, and maintains acidity. Avoid rich, moisture-retentive mulches like garden compost, which can encourage root rot. Heather dislikes root disturbance, so plant carefully and avoid repositioning later. In exposed sites, firm the soil around the base after winter frosts, as shallow roots can lift. No staking is needed; the plants are naturally compact and wind-tolerant once settled.

Pruning

Heather requires annual pruning to stay compact, floriferous, and tidy. Without it, plants become leggy, woody at the base, and flower poorly. Prune in March or April, just as new growth begins to show but before it extends fully. Pruning too late removes the developing flower buds; too early and frost may damage fresh cuts. Use sharp hand shears or secateurs—hedge trimmers work well for large drifts but can look brutal on individual specimens. Remove the previous year's flowering shoots, cutting back to just below the old flower spikes and into the green foliage beneath. Take off roughly one-third to half the top growth, but never cut into old, bare wood lower down; heather will not regenerate from leafless brown stems and you risk killing the plant. The aim is to trim lightly into the leafy growth, encouraging dense branching and abundant late-summer and autumn flowers. If you inherit an old, neglected heather that has become sparse and woody, replacement is usually more successful than renovation. Young plants establish quickly and will outperform a struggling veteran within two seasons. After pruning, rake off the clippings to prevent a matted layer smothering new shoots. No other pruning is needed through the year. Deadheading spent flowers is unnecessary—the dried blooms often provide winter interest and structure, and spring pruning removes them anyway. Focus your effort on that single annual trim in early spring.

Maintenance

Once established, heather is remarkably undemanding. Water new plants regularly through their first spring and summer, especially in dry spells, but mature specimens tolerate drought well thanks to their deep, fibrous roots and low water needs. In prolonged summer droughts, an occasional deep soak is appreciated, but avoid keeping the soil constantly moist—heather resents waterlogging and is prone to root rot (Phytophthora) in poorly drained or overly wet conditions. Feed sparingly in March with a controlled-release ericaceous fertiliser or a light scattering of blood, fish and bone. Heather evolved on nutrient-poor moorland and too much feeding, especially nitrogen, produces soft, lush growth prone to disease and reduces flowering. One modest application per year is sufficient; many gardeners skip feeding altogether on naturally acidic soils without ill effect. Heather is fully evergreen and hardy to zone 4, so no winter protection is needed in temperate Europe. Mulch lightly each spring with composted bark or pine needles to suppress weeds and maintain soil acidity, but keep mulch clear of the stems to prevent rot. Pests are rare. The main threat is heather beetle (Lochmaea suturalis), whose larvae strip foliage in spring, turning it brown. Inspect plants in April and May; if you spot greyish larvae or browning patches, pick off by hand or apply an insecticide labelled for ornamental beetles. Phytophthora root rot is the most serious disease, causing dieback and death; it is incurable, so prevention through good drainage and avoiding overwatering is essential. Remove and destroy any affected plants promptly to limit spread.

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