June care

Siberian iris in June: monthly care

Month-by-month careIris sibirica

In June your siberian iris needs attention: watch the bloom.

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  • Blooms
Siberian iris (Iris sibirica)
Foto: Feel free to use my photos, but please mention me as the author and if you want send me a message. or (rufre@lenz-nenning.at) / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0 at

What to do this June

Blooms

Siberian iris has high water needs and performs best when the soil stays consistently moist, particularly during the growing season from spring through to midsummer. Water regularly in dry spells, aiming to keep the root zone damp but not waterlogged (though it tolerates brief flooding better than most perennials). In autumn and winter, natural rainfall is usually sufficient in temperate Europe, but keep an eye on newly planted rhizomes in dry autumns. Mulch annually in spring with organic matter to conserve moisture and suppress weeds. Feed in March or April as new growth emerges. Apply a balanced general-purpose fertiliser such as blood, fish and bone or a slow-release granular feed, scattering it around the base of the clump and watering in well. Avoid high-nitrogen feeds, which promote lush foliage at the expense of flowers. A single spring feed is enough; Siberian iris is not a heavy feeder and over-fertilising can cause soft growth prone to disease. This iris is fully hardy to zone 3 and requires no winter protection in zones 7–9. Leave the rhizomes in the ground year-round; they tolerate freezing temperatures without damage. Pests are rarely a problem, though slugs and snails may nibble young shoots in spring—use organic pellets or barriers if necessary. Iris sawfly caterpillars occasionally chew the foliage in late spring; inspect plants and remove by hand if seen. Diseases are uncommon, but leaf spot can develop in prolonged damp conditions, especially on congested clumps. Remove and bin affected leaves promptly, and ensure good spacing and air flow. Overall, Siberian iris is a low-maintenance, reliable perennial that asks for little beyond consistent moisture.

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