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Another John 02-03-2013 02:12 PM

Shrubs next to houses
 
Howdy all

We have a very large old (20 years?) clematis right next to the corner
of our house. It grows across the upper half of the house frontage. The
trunk is now quite thick.

Concerned about the overall size of the plant, during the winter I
determined to take the whole lot down, and replace it. However I wimped
out after I'd got halfway - couldn't bear the thought of doing away with
it completely.

If I keep cutting the upper half of the plant down annually, so that it
doesn't grow overall in size, is it reasonable to think that the root
system will also be kept in check?

Cheers
John

Plantsman50 02-03-2013 05:14 PM

Hi John,

My view; after 20 years, the root system on your Clematis is going to be as established as it ever will be. I really don't think it will increase much more in size than what it has already. I guess it is a 'montana' type? early flowering. If so, these are in prune group 1 for Clematis i.e. they flower on growth produced the previous season and following your strategy could mean much fewer flowers. For group one plants all that is required is a light trim immediately after flowering to keep the plant controlled.

Martin

Quote:

Originally Posted by Another John (Post 978935)
Howdy all

We have a very large old (20 years?) clematis right next to the corner
of our house. It grows across the upper half of the house frontage. The
trunk is now quite thick.

Concerned about the overall size of the plant, during the winter I
determined to take the whole lot down, and replace it. However I wimped
out after I'd got halfway - couldn't bear the thought of doing away with
it completely.

If I keep cutting the upper half of the plant down annually, so that it
doesn't grow overall in size, is it reasonable to think that the root
system will also be kept in check?

Cheers
John


Another John 02-03-2013 08:00 PM

Shrubs next to houses
 
(No replies yet, if ever, but anyway... clarification ...

If I keep cutting the upper half of the plant down annually, so that it
doesn't grow overall in size, is it reasonable to think that the root
system will also be kept in check?


By "cutting it down annually" I meant "cutting it down in size", or
"cutting it back" -- not actually cutting it *down*, if you see what I
mean.

John

Charlie Pridham[_2_] 03-03-2013 09:20 AM

Shrubs next to houses
 

"Another John" wrote in message
...
(No replies yet, if ever, but anyway... clarification ...

If I keep cutting the upper half of the plant down annually, so that it
doesn't grow overall in size, is it reasonable to think that the root
system will also be kept in check?


By "cutting it down annually" I meant "cutting it down in size", or
"cutting it back" -- not actually cutting it *down*, if you see what I
mean.

John


You can John but if you want the flowers then do it each June after
flowering, if you do it in winter it won't flower (I am assuming like Martin
its a Montana type)

--
Charlie, Gardening in Cornwall
Holders of National Collections of Clematis viticella
and Lapageria rosea cvs
http://www.roselandhouse.co.uk


Another John 03-03-2013 09:39 PM

Shrubs next to houses
 
Thanks Plantsman and Charlie -- very useful!

John


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