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Jenny 29-08-2004 02:33 PM

Info about Cutitng Back Perennial and Shrubs for Fall?
 
Is there some web page that gives detailed information about which of
perennials and shrubs need to be cut back in fall and how to do it?

-- Jenny



Pam - gardengal 29-08-2004 02:59 PM


"Jenny" wrote in message
...
Is there some web page that gives detailed information about which of
perennials and shrubs need to be cut back in fall and how to do it?

-- Jenny


Unfortunately, there is no single website I am aware of that will provide
this information. You can do a search on individual plants or look for "The
Well-Tended Perennial Garden" by Tracy Disabato-Aust for pretty detailed
care info on a wide assortment of common perennials. Most shrubs are not cut
back in fall. Early flowering shrubs like forsythia and lilac are pruned
immediately after they are done blooming and most other shrubs should be
trimmed or pruned in late winter just before budbreak or early spring as
they put on new growth. A good pruning manual will provide you with the
details on when and how for each individual shrub.

pam - gardengal



Vox Humana 29-08-2004 05:32 PM


"Jenny" wrote in message
...
Is there some web page that gives detailed information about which of
perennials and shrubs need to be cut back in fall and how to do it?


I'm not aware of any shrubs that need to be cut back. Sometimes people
prune shrubs to promote flowering, but it isn't a necessity. Of course
pruning some shrubs like azaleas in the fall will remove all the flower
buds. Pruning shrubs late in the fall can often stimulate grow that doesn't
have time to harden-off before winter hits. I

As for perennials, I'm also not aware of any that have to be cut back. I
see it as a housekeeping exercise, especially for perennials that are
diseased. Removing the dead parts after a couple of hard frosts will remove
spores of fungal diseases that could otherwise remain over the winter. I
generally leave my perennials as-is, with very little attention until late
winter/early spring. At that time, I go out and clean up the garden. I
think that leaving the perennials help them to self-mulch over winter. Some
perennials have interesting seed heads or pods and the dead plants can add
interest in the winter landscape. They can also provide shelter for
wildlife.



paghat 29-08-2004 06:44 PM

In article , "Vox Humana"
wrote:

"Jenny" wrote in message
...
Is there some web page that gives detailed information about which of
perennials and shrubs need to be cut back in fall and how to do it?


I'm not aware of any shrubs that need to be cut back. Sometimes people
prune shrubs to promote flowering, but it isn't a necessity. Of course
pruning some shrubs like azaleas in the fall will remove all the flower
buds. Pruning shrubs late in the fall can often stimulate grow that doesn't
have time to harden-off before winter hits. I


Not all but many shrubs decline in a very few years if never pruned, while
others stop producing flowers hence fruit & seeds therefore stop
reproducing if never pruned. Round here, in nature, it would be deer,
elk, bears, insects, & even the wind that do the pruning. In our gardens
we have to take over that natural chore. And Jenny's original question
about finding a central list of detailed information about which & when is
a good question, though I'm not sure a central source of information
exists & the care of each shrub or perennial in one's garden may well have
to be researched one at a time until the gardener slowly gains a general
knowledge of the care of sundry plant groups.

-paghat the ratgirl

--
"Of what are you afraid, my child?" inquired the kindly teacher.
"Oh, sir! The flowers, they are wild," replied the timid creature.
-from Peter Newell's "Wild Flowers"
Visit the Garden of Paghat the Ratgirl: http://www.paghat.com


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