Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Overgrown lilacs
I bought a property that has 7 large lilac bushes (several different
varieties). My problem is that the previous owner never pruned them. Now these plants consist of long woody stems that go up 6 to 8 feet with flowering blooms all across the top and no blooms below 6 feet. Question: if I prune these bushes back to six feet, can I expect any blooms at all next year ( I don't even know where the blooms would come from because there is nothing but long woody branch-like stalks from ground to 6 feet)? Should I start over and cut them down to ground and try to get new growth that way? Thank you for replies. Bruce |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Overgrown lilacs
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Overgrown lilacs
Prune them 1/3 at a time and let the suckers come up.
Derryl I bought a property that has 7 large lilac bushes (several different varieties). My problem is that the previous owner never pruned them. Now these plants consist of long woody stems that go up 6 to 8 feet with flowering blooms all across the top and no blooms below 6 feet. Question: if I prune these bushes back to six feet, can I expect any blooms at all next year ( I don't even know where the blooms would come from because there is nothing but long woody branch-like stalks from ground to 6 feet)? Should I start over and cut them down to ground and try to get new growth that way? Thank you for replies. Bruce |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
lilacs & flowering bushy things | North Carolina | |||
Do lilacs grow here? | North Carolina | |||
lilacs & flowering bushy things | North Carolina | |||
Lilacs | Gardening | |||
Lilacs-Atlanta | Gardening |