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Old 05-08-2004, 05:56 PM
JennyC
 
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Default (beginners corner) help! weigela out of control


"curiosity" [email protected] wrote in message
...
A novice here. I've recently moved into a house with a pleasant but - for

the
last three months - neglected garden.

I'm sure there's a list of jobs I will need to attend to since there seems to

be
a wide variety of shrubs (though I suspect nothing extraordinary) but I am
concerned about what, with the help of my readers digest pics, I've identified
as a weigela, It's about 8 feet tall (RD seems to set 6 feet as standard)

just
started to flower but has some particularly long stems growing from its

middle -
anything up to 11 feet tall. Can I cut these back now or should I wait until
the flowering has finished?

Also roses of many kinds (sorry for my blind ignorance on this) I suspect

shrub,
climbing etc. Any rules of thumb for pruning etc that I could use for

immediate
guidance prior to achieving my goal of becoming competent?

most grateful for any input.

Hi

The following article sums rose pruning up in a nutshell :

Now to the pruning myth. Roses will survive in spite of any amount of neglect as
far as pruning is concerned. Indeed some of them seem to flower much better when
not pruned at all, but it does nothing for the appearance of the plant and can
shorten its life span by several years.

The method of pruning has been shrouded in controversy in recent times as to
whether proper pruning or slashing is the most successful. That in itself is a
guide as to what the humble rose will endure. You can prune it hard or lightly,
in the autumn or the spring, look for outward facing buds and prune above one of
these, or just take potluck, slash everything in sight and hope for the best.

The way the professionals do it is to prune hard the first year, which is about
one inch from the union, or the second bud. Then in subsequent years they prune
floribundas to three or four buds, and HTs to five or six buds according to
variety. Some of the modern hybrids require less pruning and are best treated as
shrubs.

Pruning times is another contentious subject. In the nurseries the roses are all
topped in the late autumn and pruned in early spring. That is in February or
early March at the latest. There is nothing to be gained by delaying until later
as one cannot predict the weather, which has little or no bearing on early
pruned roses in any case. I always pruned my roses in mid February with no ill
effects.

from http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/513/32567


Jenny