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Persephone 16-06-2007 05:24 PM

Princess Plant - prune?
 

Many of you probably know about, or even have in your garden, this
gorgeous plant that has blue flowers beyond belief.

My two plants are old; have become big & straggly. I've been afraid
to prune, because my gardener told me years ago that if pruned, they
will not regrow.

T or F?

This is what California Gardens site says:

===

With the large (2") passionately purple flowers and felt-like leaves
this Princess Plant is an attention grabber. Tibouchina urvilleana
blooms almost constantly through the spring to frost. Princess Plant
goes winter deciduous for me even in frost free locations. I cut
Tibouchina urvilleana back at during the Winter to pencil sized wood
as most of the smaller branches die anyway. Tibouchina urvilleana is
a coastal gem. It also thrives in the banana belts of the inland
valleys if they are well enough protected. Heat and humidity are both
helpful for Tibouchina urvilleana. The Princess Plant dies back if
temperatures drop into the 20's and way back in the low 20's.
Unfortunately the recovery from the cold is miserably slow. The
biggest Princess Plant that I have seen is 12' tall and wide.
Tibouchina urvilleana prefers loamy well mulched soil.

===

I am in SoCalif Coastal, Zone 24-8

Your input/experience?

Persephone

symplastless 17-06-2007 01:40 PM

Princess Plant - prune?
 
If it is a woody plant, which it sounds like it may not be, here are some
instructions. I.e., for woody plants.
http://www.treedictionary.com/DICT2003/tree_pruning/

Sincerely,
John A. Keslick, Jr.
Arborist
http://home.ccil.org/~treeman
and www.treedictionary.com
Beware of so-called tree experts who do not understand tree biology.
Storms, fires, floods, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions keep reminding us
that we are not the boss.

Persephone wrote in message
...

Many of you probably know about, or even have in your garden, this
gorgeous plant that has blue flowers beyond belief.

My two plants are old; have become big & straggly. I've been afraid
to prune, because my gardener told me years ago that if pruned, they
will not regrow.

T or F?

This is what California Gardens site says:

===

With the large (2") passionately purple flowers and felt-like leaves
this Princess Plant is an attention grabber. Tibouchina urvilleana
blooms almost constantly through the spring to frost. Princess Plant
goes winter deciduous for me even in frost free locations. I cut
Tibouchina urvilleana back at during the Winter to pencil sized wood
as most of the smaller branches die anyway. Tibouchina urvilleana is
a coastal gem. It also thrives in the banana belts of the inland
valleys if they are well enough protected. Heat and humidity are both
helpful for Tibouchina urvilleana. The Princess Plant dies back if
temperatures drop into the 20's and way back in the low 20's.
Unfortunately the recovery from the cold is miserably slow. The
biggest Princess Plant that I have seen is 12' tall and wide.
Tibouchina urvilleana prefers loamy well mulched soil.

===

I am in SoCalif Coastal, Zone 24-8

Your input/experience?

Persephone




Persephone 17-06-2007 06:28 PM

Princess Plant - prune?
 
On Sun, 17 Jun 2007 08:40:58 -0400, "symplastless"
wrote:

If it is a woody plant, which it sounds like it may not be, here are some
instructions. I.e., for woody plants.
http://www.treedictionary.com/DICT2003/tree_pruning/


Thanks, but why use these instructions, when you say "it sounds like
it may NOT be"?

Confused.

Persephone

Sincerely,
John A. Keslick, Jr.
Arborist
http://home.ccil.org/~treeman
and www.treedictionary.com
Beware of so-called tree experts who do not understand tree biology.
Storms, fires, floods, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions keep reminding us
that we are not the boss.

Persephone wrote in message
...

Many of you probably know about, or even have in your garden, this
gorgeous plant that has blue flowers beyond belief.

My two plants are old; have become big & straggly. I've been afraid
to prune, because my gardener told me years ago that if pruned, they
will not regrow.

T or F?

This is what California Gardens site says:

===

With the large (2") passionately purple flowers and felt-like leaves
this Princess Plant is an attention grabber. Tibouchina urvilleana
blooms almost constantly through the spring to frost. Princess Plant
goes winter deciduous for me even in frost free locations. I cut
Tibouchina urvilleana back at during the Winter to pencil sized wood
as most of the smaller branches die anyway. Tibouchina urvilleana is
a coastal gem. It also thrives in the banana belts of the inland
valleys if they are well enough protected. Heat and humidity are both
helpful for Tibouchina urvilleana. The Princess Plant dies back if
temperatures drop into the 20's and way back in the low 20's.
Unfortunately the recovery from the cold is miserably slow. The
biggest Princess Plant that I have seen is 12' tall and wide.
Tibouchina urvilleana prefers loamy well mulched soil.

===

I am in SoCalif Coastal, Zone 24-8

Your input/experience?

Persephone




mleblanca 18-06-2007 05:34 AM

Princess Plant - prune?
 
On Jun 16, 9:24 am, Persephone wrote:
Many of you probably know about, or even have in your garden, this
gorgeous plant that has blue flowers beyond belief.

My two plants are old; have become big & straggly. I've been afraid
to prune, because my gardener told me years ago that if pruned, they
will not regrow.

T or F?

This is what California Gardens site says:

===

With the large (2") passionately purple flowers and felt-like leaves
this Princess Plant is an attention grabber. Tibouchina urvilleana
blooms almost constantly through the spring to frost. Princess Plant
goes winter deciduous for me even in frost free locations. I cut
Tibouchina urvilleana back at during the Winter to pencil sized wood
as most of the smaller branches die anyway. Tibouchina urvilleana is
a coastal gem. It also thrives in the banana belts of the inland
valleys if they are well enough protected. Heat and humidity are both
helpful for Tibouchina urvilleana. The Princess Plant dies back if
temperatures drop into the 20's and way back in the low 20's.
Unfortunately the recovery from the cold is miserably slow. The
biggest Princess Plant that I have seen is 12' tall and wide.
Tibouchina urvilleana prefers loamy well mulched soil.

===

I am in SoCalif Coastal, Zone 24-8

Your input/experience?

Persephone



Hi Perse
Well I can't speak from experience, because Tibouchina freezes
here since we often get in the 20s. But both Sunset and Botanica
say to " prune lightly after each bloom cycle." The above advice
you quoted about pencil sized wood sounds good. Just don't cut
too far back into the older wood. Maybe you could experiment on
one plant to see what happens?
They are really striking plants. (Those who grow them here just
treat them as annuals)
Emilie
NorCal


Persephone 18-06-2007 10:01 PM

Princess Plant - prune?
 
On Sun, 17 Jun 2007 21:34:04 -0700, mleblanca
wrote:

On Jun 16, 9:24 am, Persephone wrote:
Many of you probably know about, or even have in your garden, this
gorgeous plant that has blue flowers beyond belief.

My two plants are old; have become big & straggly. I've been afraid
to prune, because my gardener told me years ago that if pruned, they
will not regrow.

T or F?

This is what California Gardens site says:

===

With the large (2") passionately purple flowers and felt-like leaves
this Princess Plant is an attention grabber. Tibouchina urvilleana
blooms almost constantly through the spring to frost. Princess Plant
goes winter deciduous for me even in frost free locations. I cut
Tibouchina urvilleana back at during the Winter to pencil sized wood
as most of the smaller branches die anyway. Tibouchina urvilleana is
a coastal gem. It also thrives in the banana belts of the inland
valleys if they are well enough protected. Heat and humidity are both
helpful for Tibouchina urvilleana. The Princess Plant dies back if
temperatures drop into the 20's and way back in the low 20's.
Unfortunately the recovery from the cold is miserably slow. The
biggest Princess Plant that I have seen is 12' tall and wide.
Tibouchina urvilleana prefers loamy well mulched soil.

===

I am in SoCalif Coastal, Zone 24-8

Your input/experience?

Persephone



Hi Perse
Well I can't speak from experience, because Tibouchina freezes
here since we often get in the 20s. But both Sunset and Botanica
say to " prune lightly after each bloom cycle." The above advice
you quoted about pencil sized wood sounds good. Just don't cut
too far back into the older wood. Maybe you could experiment on
one plant to see what happens?
They are really striking plants. (Those who grow them here just
treat them as annuals)
Emilie
NorCal


Guess I'll adopt your suggestion and try on one of the plants.
Stay tuned! g

Persephone

Billy Rose 18-06-2007 11:06 PM

Princess Plant - prune?
 
In article , Persephone
wrote:

On Sun, 17 Jun 2007 21:34:04 -0700, mleblanca
wrote:

On Jun 16, 9:24 am, Persephone wrote:
Many of you probably know about, or even have in your garden, this
gorgeous plant that has blue flowers beyond belief.

My two plants are old; have become big & straggly. I've been afraid
to prune, because my gardener told me years ago that if pruned, they
will not regrow.

T or F?

This is what California Gardens site says:

===

With the large (2") passionately purple flowers and felt-like leaves
this Princess Plant is an attention grabber. Tibouchina urvilleana
blooms almost constantly through the spring to frost. Princess Plant
goes winter deciduous for me even in frost free locations. I cut
Tibouchina urvilleana back at during the Winter to pencil sized wood
as most of the smaller branches die anyway. Tibouchina urvilleana is
a coastal gem. It also thrives in the banana belts of the inland
valleys if they are well enough protected. Heat and humidity are both
helpful for Tibouchina urvilleana. The Princess Plant dies back if
temperatures drop into the 20's and way back in the low 20's.
Unfortunately the recovery from the cold is miserably slow. The
biggest Princess Plant that I have seen is 12' tall and wide.
Tibouchina urvilleana prefers loamy well mulched soil.

===

I am in SoCalif Coastal, Zone 24-8

Your input/experience?

Persephone



Hi Perse
Well I can't speak from experience, because Tibouchina freezes
here since we often get in the 20s. But both Sunset and Botanica
say to " prune lightly after each bloom cycle." The above advice
you quoted about pencil sized wood sounds good. Just don't cut
too far back into the older wood. Maybe you could experiment on
one plant to see what happens?
They are really striking plants. (Those who grow them here just
treat them as annuals)
Emilie
NorCal


Guess I'll adopt your suggestion and try on one of the plants.
Stay tuned! g

Persephone


Oh exalted Queen of the Underworld and daughter of the King of Olympus,
where does southern California costal drop to 20 F?

Went to HS in Huntington Beach.
--
Billy
Coloribus gustibus non disputatum (mostly)

Billy Rose 18-06-2007 11:09 PM

Princess Plant - prune?
 
In article , Persephone
wrote:

Emilie
NorCal


Never mind your majesty. Asleep at the wheel again.
--
Billy
Coloribus gustibus non disputatum (mostly)


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