Pruning & Trimming
Pruning & Trimming Guide
Pruning is the process of selectively removing parts of a plant, such as branches, buds, damaged growth, or spent flowers, to improve its health, appearance, and performance in the landscape. When done correctly, pruning helps plants grow stronger, look better, and produce more flowers, fruit, or healthy new growth.
Why Prune?
Pruning is an important part of keeping trees, shrubs, and flowering plants healthy and attractive. It can help highlight ornamental features such as flowers, fruit, foliage, or plant structure. Pruning is also used to control plant size, maintain a desired shape, and remove growth that may be weak, damaged, diseased, or out of place.
Dead, dying, diseased, or broken branches should always be removed when noticed. It is also helpful to remove branches that cross, rub against each other, or crowd the center of the plant. Opening up the plant’s structure improves air circulation and can help reduce insect and disease problems.
When shaping a plant, it is important to understand its natural growth habit. Trying to force a plant into a shape that does not match its natural form can lead to poor results. In most cases, plants should be allowed to grow slightly larger each year, trimming only a portion of the new growth rather than cutting back too aggressively.
Pruning Methods
Light Trimming
Light trimming is used to maintain a plant’s shape or size throughout the growing season. This type of pruning is usually done between late winter and late summer, depending on the plant. Deadheading, or removing spent flowers, is also a form of light pruning and can encourage many flowering plants to produce more blooms.
Annual Hard Pruning
Some deciduous shrubs benefit from being cut back hard once a year. This method is often used for plants that produce their best flowers, stems, or foliage on new growth. Annual hard pruning is typically done in late winter or early spring before new growth begins.
Rejuvenation or Thinning
Rejuvenation pruning helps older shrubs stay healthy and productive. Each year, about one-third of the oldest branches are removed to encourage fresh new growth, improve air circulation, and maintain a stronger plant structure. This is usually done in late winter or early spring, or immediately after flowering for spring-blooming plants.
Basic Pruning Tools
Having the right tools makes pruning easier and helps create cleaner cuts. Common pruning tools include hand pruners, loppers, and small pruning saws. Keeping tools sharp and clean is important to protect plant health and prevent unnecessary damage.
We carry a great selection of pruning tools for trees, shrubs, perennials, and landscape maintenance.
When to Prune
The best time to prune depends on the type of plant, when it blooms, and how much pruning is needed. Broken, dead, diseased, or damaged branches can be removed at any time of year.
Most trees and shrubs that bloom on new growth are best pruned in late winter or early spring before new growth begins. Plants that bloom on old wood, such as rhododendrons, azaleas, lilacs, and some hydrangeas, should be pruned right after flowering so you do not remove next year’s flower buds.
February – April
Late winter through early spring is a good time to prune many summer-flowering shrubs and plants that bloom on new growth. This may include butterfly bush, some hydrangeas, crape myrtle, roses, spirea, and privet. This is also a common time to prune fruit trees and many evergreens, including arborvitae, holly, boxwood, juniper, and yew.
May – June
Prune most spring-flowering trees and shrubs immediately after they bloom. This includes plants such as andromeda, azalea, forsythia, rhododendron, lilac, dogwood, flowering cherry, flowering plum, and certain hydrangea varieties.
June – July
Early to midsummer is often a good time to thin many deciduous trees, including birch, linden, maple, honey locust, flowering cherry, and flowering plum. Hedges can also be trimmed as needed during this time to maintain their shape.
August – December
Avoid heavy pruning late in the season. Cutting plants back too much during this time can encourage tender new growth that may not harden off before winter, making it more likely to suffer frost damage. From late summer through winter, pruning should generally be limited to removing dead, broken, or damaged branches.
With the right timing and technique, pruning can help keep your landscape plants healthier, stronger, and more beautiful year after year.
All About Annuals
Annuals are one of the easiest and most colorful ways to brighten up your garden, landscape, patio, deck, entryway, or containers. Annuals provide beautiful color and interest throughout the growing season and can be used almost anywhere you want an instant pop of blooms or foliage.
Whether planted in garden beds, window boxes, hanging baskets, planters, or along walkways, annuals are a great way to refresh your outdoor space year after year.
Preparing the Soil
Healthy annuals start with well-prepared soil. Before planting, loosen the soil to a depth of about 6–10 inches. If your soil is sandy, heavy with clay, or compacted, mix in compost, peat moss, or another organic soil amendment to help improve drainage, aeration, and root growth.
For areas that do not drain well, raised beds or containers are a great option. Annuals do not like sitting in wet soil for long periods of time, so good drainage is important.
A complete fertilizer or time-release fertilizer can be added before planting, following the directions on the product label. Avoid working the soil when it is too wet, especially early in spring, as this can lead to compaction and make it harder for air, water, and roots to move through the soil.
Understanding Annuals
True annuals complete their entire life cycle in one growing season. They sprout, grow, flower, produce seed, and then die, which means most annuals need to be replanted each year.
Annuals are commonly grouped by their sun tolerance: Full sun, part sun/part shade, & full shade.
Choosing the Right Location
Most annuals need at least 4–6 hours of sunlight each day to flower well, although there are also many shade-tolerant varieties available. Choose a planting location based on the needs of the specific annual you are planting.
Avoid placing annuals in areas where water sits for several hours after heavy rain, as overly wet soil can lead to root problems.
When & How to Plant Annuals
When planting annuals, carefully remove them from plastic or fiber pots. If planting in peat pots, remove the upper edge of the pot so it does not pull moisture away from the roots.
For best results, gently loosen the roots before planting. Pinching off early buds or flowers at planting time can encourage better branching and help the plant grow fuller and stronger.
After planting, water thoroughly. Pay close attention to watering during the first few weeks while the plants develop their root systems. Consistent moisture is especially important for healthy growth and continuous flowering.
Planting Tender Annuals
Wait until all danger of frost has passed before planting tender annuals outdoors. This is typically around mid-May. Give plants time to adjust to outdoor conditions before planting them directly into garden beds or containers.
Helpful Supplies for Planting Annuals
To make planting easier, keep the right supplies on hand. Fertilizer, lime if needed, gloves, a hand rake/cultivator, mulch, and a trowel are all useful when planting and caring for annuals.
With the right soil preparation, planting location, and care, annuals can bring long-lasting color and beauty to your garden all season long.
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