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Old 22-04-2007, 09:06 PM posted to rec.gardens
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Default What to do with the quince

I have an informal hedge row of the old fashioned flowering quince bushes.
It is now about 18 feet wide and 50 feet long. It's quite tall (maybe 12
feet) and suckers madly. I've never pruned it except many years ago when an
exceptionally hard winter and dry summer caused it to die back drastically.
I cut it off to about 12 inches above the ground and it flourished - maybe
flourished too much.

So, what to do now? The forsythia bushes to the east of it have never bloom
very well, in part because the quince and the staghorn sumac shade it. The
quince bushes have already flowered but have been set back because of the
late freeze. I'm considering cutting the whole row of quinces back to about
12 inches and spend the rest of the summer trying to keep the outlying
suckers cut back. I just can't imagine how I could ever get the bushes
pruned by just cutting out a few at a time. It really looks like a job for
a chainsaw. I realize I'll probably have few blooms next spring but I hope
the extra sun will give the forsythia bushes a boost and help them bloom
better, at least for the next few years.

So, what do you think? Good plan or will I be sorry? I just finished
reading madgardner's vent about the cut off forsythia and fear I may be
committing essentially the same crime except it will be quince bushes
instead. I really like the quince bushes and short of like the wild
overgrown look but fear it's getting overdone. Any advice or comments would
be appreciated.


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Old 22-04-2007, 09:38 PM posted to rec.gardens
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Default What to do with the quince

In article .net,
"LAH" wrote:

I have an informal hedge row of the old fashioned flowering quince bushes.
It is now about 18 feet wide and 50 feet long. It's quite tall (maybe 12
feet) and suckers madly. I've never pruned it except many years ago when an
exceptionally hard winter and dry summer caused it to die back drastically.
I cut it off to about 12 inches above the ground and it flourished - maybe
flourished too much.

So, what to do now? The forsythia bushes to the east of it have never bloom
very well, in part because the quince and the staghorn sumac shade it. The
quince bushes have already flowered but have been set back because of the
late freeze. I'm considering cutting the whole row of quinces back to about
12 inches and spend the rest of the summer trying to keep the outlying
suckers cut back. I just can't imagine how I could ever get the bushes
pruned by just cutting out a few at a time. It really looks like a job for
a chainsaw. I realize I'll probably have few blooms next spring but I hope
the extra sun will give the forsythia bushes a boost and help them bloom
better, at least for the next few years.

So, what do you think? Good plan or will I be sorry? I just finished
reading madgardner's vent about the cut off forsythia and fear I may be
committing essentially the same crime except it will be quince bushes
instead. I really like the quince bushes and short of like the wild
overgrown look but fear it's getting overdone. Any advice or comments would
be appreciated.


Any fruit? Makes a great jelly in combo with other fruits and alone.
Otherwise the flower is pleasing. Tart + sugar = remember spring but I
do not jell them. Donąt do much jam etc these days.

My flowering quince bushes border on small trees and I like them for
the bloom primarily. Sort of fuzzy.


Bill who does the low carb stuff except in Dec and Jan. )

--

S Jersey USA Zone 5 Shade
http://www.ocutech.com/ High tech Vison aid
This article is posted under fair use rules in accordance with
Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, and is strictly for the educational
and informative purposes. This material is distributed without profit.
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Old 22-04-2007, 10:04 PM posted to rec.gardens
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Default What to do with the quince


"William Wagner" wrote in message
...
In article .net,
"LAH" wrote:

I have an informal hedge row of the old fashioned flowering quince
bushes.


Any fruit? Makes a great jelly in combo with other fruits and alone.
Otherwise the flower is pleasing. Tart + sugar = remember spring but I
do not jell them. Donąt do much jam etc these days.


Not to speak of, just a few here and there. I'm almost positive there won't
be any this year what with the late freeze.

My flowering quince bushes border on small trees and I like them for
the bloom primarily. Sort of fuzzy.


Bill who does the low carb stuff except in Dec and Jan. )

--

S Jersey USA Zone 5 Shade
http://www.ocutech.com/ High tech Vison aid
This article is posted under fair use rules in accordance with
Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, and is strictly for the educational
and informative purposes. This material is distributed without profit.



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Old 22-04-2007, 11:57 PM posted to rec.gardens
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Default What to do with the quince


| Any fruit? Makes a great jelly in combo with other fruits and
alone.

|Not to speak of, just a few here and there. I'm almost positive
there won't
|be any this year what with the late freeze.

We have a flowering quince but it produces only the occasional lonely
"apple". It's a spreading & runnering thug but has lovely salmon-pink
flowers. I think I've seen dark red ones too.

Our neighbour had a quince that was more like a shrubby tree with many
upright stems. Don't remember the flower colour. It produced copiously
but she didn't want the fruit. We got some and it made great jelly.
Sadly she uprooted the thing & burned it without offering us a
cutting.

I'm thinking the garden-centre"flowering quince" (what we have) are
maybe a variety that's bred for ornament rather than fruit?

Alexander Miller.

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