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Old 22-10-2004, 09:05 PM
Rob Gray
 
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Do you know the exact species of tree that you have? A lot of people in
eastern north america call the native Juniper trees "Red Cedar" even
though they are not true cedards. The exact tree you have would affect
the advice regarding puning.

Rob
NE PA

Dirk Puslich wrote:
Hello,

A month ago I had a cedar hedge planted in my backyard.
They are about 6.5 to 7 feet in height right now but are kind of
scrawny.

Over the years I want them to first bush out more, then grow higher.

I was told by a friend that when you trim the tops, it makes the new
growth come out to the sides more and not get too woody, and nce they
are bushy enough then you can let them grow higher.

I have 3 questions, assuming this is right:

1) What time of year should the tops of the cedars be lopped off
(Fall? Spring? mid Summer?) Just once per year??

2) Given that they were just planted in mid September, should I wait a
while before I take the hedge trimmers to them, so as not to stress
them too much, or is it OK to trim them now?

3) Is there a rule of thumb as to how much to lop off the top? I was
thinking about a foot off of each one for now.

- I live in Canada (Toronto) where we get some cold winters if that
makes a difference.


Any advice would be appreciated! Thanks!