Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (2024)

Hebes are a genus of about 90 species of evergreen, long-flowering shrubs, some with coloured foliage that tend to form dense hummocks. Hebes were originally classified as species of Veronica, and more recent analysis has shown them to indeed be part of the Veronica genus where they may soon be moved back.

Watch how to grow hebe

When does hebe flower?

Most hebes originate in New Zealand with a few species scattered around the southern hemisphere. A hebe's flowering period is from midsummer to mid autumn, with most flowering between June and September.

A hebe can grow between 40cm to 1.5m, and most hebes prefer poor, well-drained soil. They will withstand high winds and salt spray. Although some hebe plants are hardy, others can suffer from frost damage to new shoots. Most have a hardiness rating of RHS H3 or RHS H4 and are suitable for gardens in USDA zones 8a to 10b.

Jump to

  • When to prune hebe
  • How to take hebe cuttings
  • The best soil for hebe
  • Why plant hebe?
  • The best hebe plants for your garden

Hebe: how to care for, prune and grow hebe

When to prune hebe

A light, annual pruning will keep the neat, compact shape of hebe plants and ensure that they flower well. Immediately after they have finished flowering simply cut out the dead hebe flowers. After a harsh winter some stems may have been burnt by frost. Inspect your hebe at the end of March and prune away any damaged stems, cutting back to a live bud. I have seen small-leaved hebes tightly clipped into balls as an alternative to box. This looks attractive but does mean that the flowers are sacrificed.

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (1)

How to take hebe cuttings

It is ironic that a plant named for the Greek goddess of youth should be short-lived. Although some hebes will still be looking good after a decade or so, most will perform at their best for a shorter time and then need to be replaced. A hebe is one of the easiest shrubs to take cuttings from, so rather than buying a replacement plant, have a go at propagating your own hebe. Begin the process as soon as your hebe starts to look sad, and by the time you need to remove it you will have a new plant ready.

Cuttings can be taken from mid July until early September. Using sharp secateurs, cut off stems of the current season’s growth that are about 15-20cm long. Immediately pop these into a plastic bag and keep them in the shade until you are indoors and ready to pot them.

Fill your containers with a proprietary cuttings compost or a mix of 50 per cent compost and 50 per cent horticultural grit, then water the pot and allow it to drain. A 9cm pot will take three or four hebe cuttings. Prepare the cuttings by shortening them to about 10-15cm long, cutting just below the point where a set of leaves is growing. Remove the lower leaves and snip off the tip of the hebe cutting. Push the cutting into the compost, close to the edge of the pot.

If you want belt-and-braces security, you can dip the end of the hebe cutting in hormone rooting powder or rooting gel. If you have a greenhouse or cold frame, store the cuttings there, otherwise cover the pot and cuttings with a plastic bag in a light, warm place away from direct sunlight. Regularly remove the bag to reduce the humidity around the cuttings. By the following spring, the cuttings will have rooted and can be transplanted into individual pots filled with a loam-based potting compost.

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The best soil for hebe

Hebe plants need poor, well-drained soil in an open, sunny situation. Ignore the usual advice to incorporate compost when you plant shrubs and don’t give them an annual feed. Too rich a soil will encourage weak, lax growth for your hebe that will be susceptible to frost damage. If you have heavy soil, digging lots of horticultural grit into the area before you plant will increase the likelihood of your hebe thriving. Hebes do not like cold wind, so try to plant them in a sheltered area.

Why plant hebe?

On paper, hebe plants have a lot going for them – they are long flowering, easy to grow, and evergreen. Nevertheless, despite their many qualities, they are not in fashion. Why this should be is rather puzzling; surely they deserve more recognition.

Part of the reason might be that some designers have not yet found a place for neat domes of a hebe in the naturalistic froth of perennials and grasses that currently dominates their work. Moreover, they have a reputation for being short-lived. There are signs, however, that the tide is starting to turn in the favour of hebe plants as dynamic breeders are starting to produce new cultivars, often with notable foliage.

Most hebes form hummocks that can, with a little imagination, be used in many garden settings. Some can be clipped into neat domes that are at ease among the clean lines of contemporary gardens. I have seen the solidity of groups of dwarf hebes looking wonderful as a background to clouds of Sporobolus heterolepis. It is a combination that would work well with other grasses and airy perennials. Low hedges of hebe are often used as a windbreak in exposed coastal gardens and the same planting could be used to protect and enclose herbaceous plantings in inland gardens. Some of the newer introductions have been specifically bred for pots and containers and for small, urban gardens. It remains to be seen whether hebes become sought after but a plant that is so versatile and so beautiful should nevertheless be seriously considered in any garden.

The best hebe plants for your garden

Hebe ‘Pascal’

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (11)

A hebe that is a truly spectacular sight during the winter when the narrow, lance-shaped leaves turn a vibrant burgundy colour. During the summer the foliage is apple-green and the flowers are a delicate pale blue. 50cm. AGM*. RHS H4†.

Buy Hebe Pascal from Crocus

Buy Hebe Pascal from the RHS

Buy Hebe Pascal from Thompson & Morgan

Hebe ‘Northern Lights’

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (12)

A striking hebe plant launched two years ago that has variegated foliage comprising oval, grey-green leaves with wide, cream margins. The new growth on this hebe has dark stems and pink-edged leaves, which complement the purple flowers. 1m. RHS H3.

Find out more about Hebe Northern Lights at the RHS

Hebe ‘Sparkling Sapphires’

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (13)

This variegated hebe is a recent introduction. The young leaves have a pale margin that ages to a creamy yellow in May and June. A floriferous plant that has masses of pale-blue blooms. 50cm. RHS H4.

Buy Hebe Sparkling Sapphires from the RHS

Buy Hebe Sparkling Sapphires from Garden Beauty

Hebe buxifolia ‘Nana’

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (14)

A dense, rounded hebe shrub with small, elliptical, glossy leaves, about 1cm long, that resemble those of boxwood. The pale-lavender flowers appear at the tips of the stems in July. A robust cultivar that requires little maintenance. 30cm.

Buy Hebe Buxifolia Nana from Gardening Express

Buy Hebe Buxifolia Nana from OnBuy

Hebe ‘Heartbreaker’

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (15)

A hebe grown primarily for its colourful foliage. During the summer the leaves are green with a white border but in autumn they turn pale purple and pink. Lavender-coloured racemes of flowers in summer. 75cm. RHS H3.

Buy Hebe Heartbreaker from the RHS

Buy Hebe Heartbreaker from Crocus

Hebe Garden Beauty Blue (= ‘Cliv’)

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (16)

60cm. RHS H4.

Buy Hebe Garden Beauty Blue from the RHS

Buy Hebe Garden Beauty Blue from Thompson & Morgan

Hebe Starlight (= ‘Marklight’)

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (17)

The combination of green and cream variegated foliage and dazzling, bright-white flowers on this hebe attracted a lot of attention when this cultivar was first introduced in 2018. 1m. RHS H3.

Buy Hebe Starlight from the RHS

Buy Hebe Starlight from Hayloft

Hebe Blue Ice (= ‘Lowapb’)

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (18)

Raised by Lowaters and introduced in 2013, this hebe was selected for its compact shape and bright-green foliage. Masses of pale-blue flowers on upright spikes appear for about six weeks in midsummer. 50cm.

Buy Hebe Blue Ice from the RHS

Buy Hebe Blue Ice from Thompson & Morgan

Hebe ‘Red Edge’

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (19)

A popular hybrid hebe that was introduced in the 1960s. The glaucous leaves have a red margin that becomes even more pronounced in winter. The small flowers are pale mauve. 60cm. AGM. RHS H4.

Buy Hebe Red Edge from Crocus

Buy Hebe Red Edge from the RHS

Hebe Garden Beauty Purple (= ‘Nold’)

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (20)

A rounded and compact hebe shrub that has small, deep-green leaves. The purple flowers first appear in early June and become paler as they age. 65cm. RHS H4, USDA 8a-10a.

Buy Hebe Garden Beauty Purple from the RHS

Buy Hebe Garden Beauty Purple from Thompson & Morgan

Hebe Blush Elegance (= ‘Lowele’)

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (21)

A large and floriferous hebe shrub with glossy, green foliage that is covered with soft-pink flowers from July through to October. The flowers fade almost to white as they age. 1.2m. RHS H3.

Buy Hebe Blush Elegance from the RHS

Buy Hebe Blush Elegance from Garden Beauty

Hebe Midnight Sky (= ‘Lowten’)

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (22)

A startling sight in winter when the glossy, green leaves turn deep purple, sometimes looking almost black. The flowers appear from June to August and are a purplish-pink colour. 75cm. RHS H4.

Buy Hebe Midnight Sky from the RHS

Buy Hebe Midnight Sky from Garden Beauty

Hebe ‘Caledonia’

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (23)

A compact, rounded hebe plant that is ideal for a container. The striking, dark-green leaves have a red edge and are entirely plum-coloured when they emerge. Violet flowers from late spring to early autumn. 60cm. AGM. RHS H4, USDA 7a-10b.

Buy Hebe Caledonia from the RHS

Buy Hebe Caledonia from J. Parker's

Hebe ‘Baby Marie’

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (24)

A low-growing, compact hebe that makes a good flowering plant. The flowers are pink in bud, opening to a pale lilac and fading to white. An early flowering form that blooms in April and May. 40cm. RHS H4.

Buy Hebe Baby Marie from Gardening Express

Buy Hebe Baby Marie from the RHS

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Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant (2024)

FAQs

Hebe: how to grow, when to prune and which to plant? ›

When to prune hebe. A light, annual pruning will keep the neat, compact shape of hebe plants and ensure that they flower well. Immediately after they have finished flowering simply cut out the dead hebe flowers. After a harsh winter some stems may have been burnt by frost.

How and when to prune hebes? ›

Prune hebes as soon as the flowers have faded. This leaves plenty of time for the new growth to mature before cold weather hits. Using secateurs, remove the dead flower heads and cut the foliage back by up to a third. If your plant has become 'leggy' and tired, you can often rejuvenate it by cutting it back hard.

Can you grow a hebe from a cutting? ›

Hebes root easily from softwood cuttings, particularly in the summer. Taking softwood cuttings from your hebes, and indeed any plant, is a useful way of getting new plants for free.

What's wrong with my hebe? ›

What are shrubby Veronica (Hebe) leaf diseases? The leaves of shrubby Veronica species can be affected by leaf spot fungi (Stemphylium sp. and Septoria exotica), downy mildew (Peronospora grisea), A white powdery fungal growth on the surface of leaves, buds, petals and shoots of roses and many other plants.

How wide do hebes grow? ›

There are a large number of cultivars and hybrids available where most grow to around 1-1.5m high and wide, with a naturally rounded shape and a dense habit. Some species are grown for their foliage while others are grown for their abundance of flowers. Hebe foliage can be light to dark green.

What month should you trim bushes? ›

Dormant pruning is done in late winter or early spring after the threat of frost has passed. Summer pruning is best done in early to mid-summer, as late summer trimmings could leave your fruit trees susceptible to cold damage.

When should I prune my bushes for growth? ›

Summer-Blooming Trees and Shrubs

Prune them in winter while they're dormant, or in early spring just before they push out their new growth. You can even cut them all the way to the ground in late winter, and they'll still bloom that same summer.

What is the lifespan of a Hebe plant? ›

Hebe typically lives for only a decade.

Where is the best place to plant hebes? ›

A warm, sheltered, sun-drenched spot with free-draining soil is ideal. Hebe is one of nine plants considered to be a high-risk host for the bacteria Xylella fastidiosa.

Can I cut a plant and regrow it? ›

Cuttings can be made from any part of the plant. Most frequently, however, either a stem or leaf is used. A stem cutting includes a piece of stem plus any attached leaves or buds. Thus, the stem cutting only needs to form new roots to be a complete, independent plant.

Why are my hebes turning yellow? ›

💡 Nutrient Shortfalls

Yellow leaves might be your Hebe's cry for help. Nitrogen deficiency turns older leaves yellow, while a lack of Iron makes new leaves pale and veiny.

Why are my hebes black? ›

Fungal and bacterial infections cause black spots on Hebe leaves. Inspect undersides of leaves for early detection of black spots. Prune and space plants to prevent and treat black spot spread.

What to plant next to hebes? ›

Hebes work well with a range of other plants, including catmint and Japanese anemones (pictured, above), along with cranesbill geraniums, penstemons and other herbaceous perennials.

Do hebes need pruning? ›

A light, annual pruning will keep the neat, compact shape of hebe plants and ensure that they flower well. Immediately after they have finished flowering simply cut out the dead hebe flowers. After a harsh winter some stems may have been burnt by frost.

How do you shape a Hebe? ›

Deadhead any spent flowers once faded. Prune hebe shrubs lightly in late summer, to help keep their shape and remove any dead or damaged wood. Prune again in the spring back to healthy, new growth. Hard prune hebe shrubs that look worn and leggy to attempt rejuvenation.

Do hebes go brown in winter? ›

Where they grow natively, New Zealand, they have to deal with warm summers and cold winters. Hebe's may crisp up, go brown or lose their leaves as a protection measure.

What does a dead hebe look like? ›

The hebe are likely dead, but check the bases and see if you can feel anything firm. If it is dried at the base and not firm, they are dead. If there is still some green, firm stems at the base, it may come back. Poor potato yield is normally caused by it being too warm or poor nutrition in the soil.

When should I cut down bushes? ›

In spring lightly prune the whole shrub to encourage buds to break further down the stems. Later in summer prune harder into the plant to create the desired size and shape.

What is the best position for a Hebe? ›

Growing position – hebes need full sun, in free-draining soil. As well as growing in borders and containers, they can also make informal low hedges. They cope well in coastal locations too. Most are hardy, but prefer a warm, sunny spot.

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