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redzinnia3

Why won't my lilac bush bloom?

redzinnia3
16 years ago

I have had a lilac bush for four years but it has never bloomed. It is very healthy and green and grows bigger every year but never blooms. Any suggestions on how I can help it bloom?

Comments (17)

  • Dibbit
    16 years ago

    How big was it when you planted it? If it was still young, then it may take another year or two - lilacs have to be a certain minimum age or size to bloom, but I forget the number. If it is planted in lawn, and the lawn is well fed, the lilac may be getting too much nitrogen, which encourages leaves at the expense of flowers. If your soil is very acidic, then the lilac may be struggling - they like a sweeter, more basic soil, but since you say it is lush and green, I doubt that's your problem. Take a look at the ends of the branches - if there are very fat buds next to thinner buds, then it set some flower buds last summer, and you may - depending on the severity of the winter, late spring frosts, etc., etc. - get a few flowers this spring. It takes a few years before most lilacs are full of flowers, like you see in the photos. There are exceptions, but in general, it just takes time. Which is probably NOT what you wanted to hear, but....

  • diggingthedirt
    16 years ago

    If you are cutting off the branch tips (pruning at the wrong time) you may be removing the next year's flower buds.

    How many hours of sun does it get? They prefer full sun, and will leaf our fine but not bloom if they're in too much shade.

    The more info you provide, the more likely we can figure out the problem. Plant size, water, soil type (sandy, clay, lean or rich), and sun exposure are a few of the useful pieces of the puzzle, along with anything you or anyone else has done to the shrub, like feeding, watering, pruning.

  • harryshoe zone6 eastern Pennsylvania
    16 years ago

    I have also found that lilacs take years to bloom when started from small plants.

  • goodhors
    16 years ago

    This is why I only buy a lilac that is IN BLOOM to show me the color and that bush will bloom NOW. You could buy one that shows seeds from the season's flowers, to prove it had bloomed. They all seem to KEEP blooming if they have flowered once. I only trim sucker growth on small bushes, never tops or sides.

    I am unwilling to invest the time anymore. I grew one lilac for almost 10 years, waiting for flowers. Then it was not the color the tag promised!! It was a common, light purple lilac. I was SO ANGRY about the time I had invested in that bush.

    Some tiny lilacs do bloom in spite of size. I got a Sensation, purple with white edge, blooming on a 12inch high stick. Bloomed every year after as well. The color just was not that great from a few feet away, even on the bigger bush. Up close, 2ft, flowers were pretty, you can see them well. I thought it would have terrific color contrast from the photos.

    The Belle of Moscow, white double, is a very lovely one, blooming on a 3ft stick, 2 years now. EXCELLENT smell as a bonus.

    Now if I can talk the neighbor out of a shoot from her bush. They have the most SPECTACULAR wine-purple lilac, blooms huge flowers in large quantities with great smell. I covet that bush!!

  • redzinnia3
    Original Author
    16 years ago

    Hallelujah, after five years my lilac bush finally bloomed for the first time. Thanks for all of your responses.

  • prairie-rose
    16 years ago

    One of my 5-year-old lilacs (just regular old Syringa Vulgaris), finally has flower buds, as well. The fifth year's the charm, apparently. My "Miss Kim" and Dwarf Koreans, planted in the same year, have been blooming from the get-go, but while they're nice, there's nothing like those traditional "real" lilac blooms.

  • harryshoe zone6 eastern Pennsylvania
    16 years ago

    Yup. There is something special about those "real" lilac blooms. Can you smell it?

    {{gwi:203053}}

  • prairie-rose
    16 years ago

    Harryshoe, gorgeous photo--I wish it were scratch-n-sniff! Looking forward to it--I hope the hard freeze danger is about past (lost a LOT of new growth and flowers on just about everything last April).

  • bzmumeuv4_aol_com
    13 years ago

    I moved into a house about 10 yrs ago and there was a huge lilac bush in the front yard, but VERY over grown with branches that hung out every where. I didn't want to cut the bush down because I love lilac but I needed to really trim it. I only cut off branches that looked dead or totally dry nothing that was green and only from the sides nothing from the top so I thought it would be ok (I am no where near a gardening expert) but for the past few years it has gotten less and less bloom. Is it totally gone or do I just need to wait it out. It hasn't gotten a really good bloom in the past 6-7 yrs. I'm wondering if I should just give up but I keep thinking next year it will be better. Any suggestions??

  • Neeleyshaina_yahoo_com
    12 years ago

    thanks all, I was about to give up on a bush my grandma gave me. But itsa baby n healthy so ill give it more time to grow up

  • avamom_centurylink_net
    12 years ago

    My lilac bloomed in the pot until I could plant it. Then 2 years at our new home and this no blooms. Why?

  • wvdiana
    11 years ago

    I'll go everyone one better--I bought a lilac bush more than 30 years ago and it has never bloomed. Hasn't grown very tall either; it's only @ 3 feet tall. My soil has a lot of clay. Originally, it was planted in partial shade but I moved it to full sun 10 years ago or so. I've threatened to dig it out but am just stubborn enough to leave it year after year.

  • Martha
    8 years ago

    I bought a small little home in May 2014. This is now August 2015. In my front yard, I have a spectacular lilic tree .. it's fairly big. When it is in bloom in the spring, the flowers are all about the height of my second floor loft window. The smell is intoxicating. The flowers are a pale yellow, nearly white. My street is apparently jealous. :D Someone, I don't know who, put a cutting into the front garden, just under my living room window. I left it there, to see what would happen. So far, nothing. It's getting taller little by little, about three feet, but I see no evidence of any flowering yet. My sister says I should give it a good trim. I'm not so sure that would be a good idea?


  • Martha
    7 years ago

    It's now 2016 and that little lilac tree in front of my living room window is still growing. No flowers yet. Course, it's only beginning of May ....


  • kitasei
    7 years ago

    Is it possible that non-blooming lilacs are suckers from the root stock of grafted lilacs? This was offered as an explanation for why all my wisteria doesn't bloom. I too have a non-blooming lilac and now wonder if it was a transplanted sucker.

  • victoriantailor2000
    6 years ago

    I transferred a lilac bush root, the 3rd year it bloomed very well, now the 4th, 5th and 6th year, flower buds appear then are gone without blooming, any ideas?

  • Cathy Kaufell
    6 years ago
    last modified: 6 years ago

    Grow lilacs in fertile, humus-rich, well-drained, neutral to alkaline soil (at a pH near 7.0). Select a site where your lilac will get full sun—at least 6 hours. Make sure the site drains well. If your soil is acidic add some lime.

    https://theherbladyblog.wordpress.com/2017/04/24/my-lilac-garden/