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#1
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Jasmine bare underneath
Hi everyone,
I'm new to this site and need a little help... I have a jasmine that I inherited when I moved in, it previously was a huge clump that trailed down a wall which was in shade so I have dragged the heavy clump in the opposite direction to where it will get more sun. Does that make sense? Anyway, it has now exposed all the lower stems which are completely bare, I wouldn't mind but it's about 2 foot long and looks awful, the top 2 foot is fine and bursting with flowers. My question is, now I have exposed the lower part to more light will this part naturally now grow new leaves? Should I give it a good feed to encourage more growth? I have tried searching Google and have had no luck with this type of question so I am hoping someone may be able to guide me on this. Thank you all for any help you can give |
#2
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If it's the yellow winter flowering one (which is the only one I grow) I would expect it in due course to produce new green branches on top, and the green branches that are now buried under all the old stuff will die off. Mine is on the north wall of the house, where it flowers from October through to April, and I'm delighted to have something that will tolerate shade so well.
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#3
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Jasmine bare underneath
In article ,
Hellyjay wrote: I'm new to this site and need a little help... I have a jasmine that I inherited when I moved in, it previously was a huge clump that trailed down a wall which was in shade so I have dragged the heavy clump in the opposite direction to where it will get more sun. Does that make sense? Anyway, it has now exposed all the lower stems which are completely bare, I wouldn't mind but it's about 2 foot long and looks awful, the top 2 foot is fine and bursting with flowers. My question is, now I have exposed the lower part to more light will this part naturally now grow new leaves? Should I give it a good feed to encourage more growth? Yes, give it a feed, but I would recommend cutting out 1/3 of its oldest stems each year until it has regenerated (and perhaps after that). If it is the yellow, scentless one that flowers in winter, do it after flowering. If it is a summer-flowering one, do it in winter or early spring. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#4
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Jasmine bare underneath
On 29/04/2014 15:38, Nick Maclaren wrote:
In article , Hellyjay wrote: I'm new to this site and need a little help... I have a jasmine that I inherited when I moved in, it previously was a huge clump that trailed down a wall which was in shade so I have dragged the heavy clump in the opposite direction to where it will get more sun. Does that make sense? Anyway, it has now exposed all the lower stems which are completely bare, I wouldn't mind but it's about 2 foot long and looks awful, the top 2 foot is fine and bursting with flowers. My question is, now I have exposed the lower part to more light will this part naturally now grow new leaves? Should I give it a good feed to encourage more growth? Yes, give it a feed, but I would recommend cutting out 1/3 of its oldest stems each year until it has regenerated (and perhaps after that). If it is the yellow, scentless one that flowers in winter, do it after flowering. If it is a summer-flowering one, do it in winter or early spring. Regards, Nick Maclaren. If it's Summer flowering or the red Jasminum beesianum, then I'd cut it all down after flowering, it should start to re-sprout in a few weeks and give you ripe enough material to go through the winter, depending where in the UK you are. But if in doubt then cut out half this year, and the rest next year. |
#6
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Jasmine bare underneath
In article ,
Hellyjay wrote: It has white and pink flowers so think it is the summer variety so if I give it a good hair cut and a feed hopefully the brown lower stems will start to get new buds? Probably J. officinale. And, no, they probably won't. The solution is to cut out half of the older stems, as David Hill says, and look for new shoots from near the base. I just hope it doesn't sulk as the first and last time I give it a trim the leaves turned brown! Is this supposed to happen? That's probably because you cut off the new growth, and the older leaves were about to go brown, anyway. But there are other possible reasons. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
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