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Nana.Wilson 03-11-2010 10:26 PM

Lilac blooming in November!
 
1 Attachment(s)
I am in the mid-Atlantic region. It is serendipitous! Smells great too.
Nana





Wendy7 04-11-2010 04:06 PM

Lilac blooming in November!
 
Very good Nana, I have a plant that has never bloomed? Now I am in S.Calif.
but
this plant is supposed to be a hybrid to tolerate warm weather.
Do you cut yours back?
Cheers Wendy
"Nana.Wilson" wrote in message
...
I am in the mid-Atlantic region. It is serendipitous! Smells great too.
Nana




Nana.Wilson 04-11-2010 09:53 PM

Lilac blooming in November!
 
Hi Wendy. I was told (after I had been pruning) & wondering why it didn't
bloom that they bloom on last years' old wood. So no, I don't prune any
more. I do just shape her up a bit & trim away any dead wood
"Wendy7" wrote in message
...
Very good Nana, I have a plant that has never bloomed? Now I am in
S.Calif. but
this plant is supposed to be a hybrid to tolerate warm weather.
Do you cut yours back?
Cheers Wendy
"Nana.Wilson" wrote in message
...
I am in the mid-Atlantic region. It is serendipitous! Smells great too.
Nana






Bob Hobden[_3_] 05-11-2010 08:04 AM

Lilac blooming in November!
 


"Nana.Wilson" wrote .
I am in the mid-Atlantic region. It is serendipitous! Smells great too.

"Wendy7" wrote
Very good Nana, I have a plant that has never bloomed? Now I am in
S.Calif. but
this plant is supposed to be a hybrid to tolerate warm weather.
Do you cut yours back?


"Nana.Wilson" wrote ..

Hi Wendy. I was told (after I had been pruning) & wondering why it didn't
bloom that they bloom on last years' old wood. So no, I don't prune any
more. I do just shape her up a bit & trim away any dead wood

Yes, they flower on young wood made the previous season. It's why you often
see overgrown and straggly Lilac trees, people don't know when to prune
them, it's confusing. They can and should be pruned just after flowering so
they then make new young growth to flower the following year, and so on. I
know it seems wrong pruning at that time of the year, late spring/summer,
but it's not the only plant like that.

--
Regards
Bob Hobden
W.of London. UK



Steve[_2_] 06-11-2010 04:46 AM

Lilac blooming in November!
 
On 11/3/2010 6:26 PM, Nana.Wilson wrote:
I am in the mid-Atlantic region. It is serendipitous! Smells great too.
Nana


My first thought is...... I hope the whole plant isn't pushing out new
growth (leaves) as we see in your picture. If so, I think you can expect
a lot of winter injury.

Pruning.... Yeah, prune right after blooming as Bob said. Always, at
least "prune" off the dead flower heads before they attempt to form
seeds. This will give you lots of flowers every year.
If your Lilac grows with multiple trunks because new ones sprout up from
the ground, then a good thing to do, every year or two, is saw off one
or two of the oldest trunks at ground level. (More than one or two if
the Lilac is huge.) I have sometimes seen Lilacs that grow with a single
trunk only, never sending up new sprouts from the ground. That last
advice wouldn't apply to them.

Steve


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