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Judith in France 02-04-2009 03:25 PM

Pruning, in general.
 
Today I have a gardener working for me for half a day, he did in 4
hours what would take me a week to do. He pruned a lot of stuff and I
asked him to prune the Lilac, which although beautiful, is obscuring
my view of the forest. He refused!! He said it was too late, it's
not in bud yet, would you say that was too late? I should add he does
this for a living, so maybe he knows much more than I.

Judith

Stewart Robert Hinsley 02-04-2009 10:27 PM

Pruning, in general.
 
In message
,
Judith in France writes
Today I have a gardener working for me for half a day, he did in 4
hours what would take me a week to do. He pruned a lot of stuff and I
asked him to prune the Lilac, which although beautiful, is obscuring
my view of the forest. He refused!! He said it was too late, it's
not in bud yet, would you say that was too late? I should add he does
this for a living, so maybe he knows much more than I.

Judith


Lilac is a spring-flowering shrub (which flowers on the previous years
growth). If you were to prune it now you'd lose this years flowers. The
time to prune lilac is after it has flowered.
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley

Judith in France 02-04-2009 11:37 PM

Pruning, in general.
 
On Apr 2, 10:27*pm, Stewart Robert Hinsley
wrote:
In message
,
Judith in France writes

Today I have a gardener working for me for half a day, he did in 4
hours what would take me a week to do. *He pruned a lot of stuff and I
asked him to prune the Lilac, which although beautiful, is obscuring
my view of the forest. *He refused!! *He said it was too late, it's
not in bud yet, would you say that was too late? *I should add he does
this for a living, so maybe he knows much more than I.


Judith


Lilac is a spring-flowering shrub (which flowers on the previous years
growth). If you were to prune it now you'd lose this years flowers. The
time to prune lilac is after it has flowered.
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley


Thank you Stewart, a note has been made in the diary.

Judith

Spider[_2_] 07-04-2009 10:25 PM

Pruning, in general.
 

"Judith in France" wrote in message
...
Today I have a gardener working for me for half a day, he did in 4
hours what would take me a week to do. He pruned a lot of stuff and I
asked him to prune the Lilac, which although beautiful, is obscuring
my view of the forest. He refused!! He said it was too late, it's
not in bud yet, would you say that was too late? I should add he does
this for a living, so maybe he knows much more than I.

Judith


I would have said it was too early, Judith. It is usual to prune lilac
(Syringa) after flowering.

Spider



Judith in France 07-04-2009 10:38 PM

Pruning, in general.
 
On Apr 7, 10:25*pm, "Spider" wrote:
"Judith in France" wrote in ...

Today I have a gardener working for me for half a day, he did in 4
hours what would take me a week to do. *He pruned a lot of stuff and I
asked him to prune the Lilac, which although beautiful, is obscuring
my view of the forest. *He refused!! *He said it was too late, it's
not in bud yet, would you say that was too late? *I should add he does
this for a living, so maybe he knows much more than I.


Judith


I would have said it was too early, Judith. *It is usual to prune lilac
(Syringa) after flowering.

Spider


Thanks Spider, it will be done afterwards then. I was hoping to take
some shots of the garden today to show, particularly, how late
everything is, some daffs are just coming into bud. Unfortunately
either I have a cold or I am allergic to the new hens, eyes streaming
sneezing and sore eyes. I only got one egg today, that makes 3 in 2
days, not bad going!.

Judith


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