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Old 26-10-2009, 10:45 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Kate Brown Kate Brown is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Nov 2008
Posts: 92
Default lavender (pruning)

On Mon, 26 Oct 2009, Spider wrote
wrote in message
...
I have a couple of lavender in big pots outside my front door, but they
haven't been watered as well as they probably should. They've been there
for 2 years and they didn't flower very well this year. (they don't get
an amazing amount of light, and I'm terrible for remembering to water,
and being by the front door they don't get much natural rain, on the
rare occasions it bothers to rain atm!)

I've just chopped them back quite a bit tonight (got to love the
gardening in the dark process at this time of year!) but they are ...
straggley looking and quite woody. How far should I cut them back? I
don't want to kill them, but if they're only going to perform as well as
this year (or worse) it might be better if I chuck them and get
something new for next year.

Any advice from lavender experts appreciated (other than "remember to
water them occasionally!" - I already got that one!)

Thanks



Hi Vicky,

Lavenders will not sprout from old wood, so if you're looking at bare wood
then I think you need to start again. Your lavenders will sprout again from
healthy green shoots that survive the winter, but not on bare wood below
that.

I have to say that that hasn't been my experience, and jolly surprised I
was too. It's true with old plants that have got very woody (like my
mother's ten-year-olds, which flourish but are now small trees), but not
with our plants that are four or five years old - come spring, ours send
out little grey tufts from the woody base, and when the sprigs are
looking established we can cut down to just above them. Perhaps it's a
particular kind? I can't remember what they were, I thought Hidcote but
may well be wrong.



--
Kate B

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