Xtremehorticulture

How to Prune Texas Rangers

 

Q. Last year I read in your blog how to prune texas
rangers.  Now I can’t find that article.  Can you repeat it?  Thank you.
A. Maybe this is it.
Q. I would like to cut back some cassia, Texas ranger and
rosemary plants that has grown too large. When is the best time to do so?

A. There are three cassias that are commonly planted
here; feathery cassia, silverleaf cassia and desert cassia. They either bloom
in the spring or spring and fall. This means the flowers have to be formed on
last year’s wood if they bloom in the spring.

            Basic
rule of thumb is that plants that are not appreciated for their flowers then
prune them back during the winter months after leaf drop. However, if it is
very light pruning then you can do that any time.

Texas ranger sheared so flowers are removed

            On
those plants which are grown for their flowers then prune them as soon as their
bloom time is over regardless of the time of year. If plants bloom in the
spring then prune them as soon as they are done pruning in the spring. This
will give them time to initiate flower buds during the late summer for next
spring’s bloom.

            If they
bloom in the summer months, then they put flowers on spring growth. If you
prune these in the spring you run the chance of pruning off all the flowers if
they are not pruned correctly. This is very often done to oleanders when they
are hedge sheared during the spring or early summer months.

What it will look like if it is not sheared

So with this in mind…. Removing wood from Texas ranger
now also removes flowers so do not prune with a hedge shears or you will remove
the flowers as well. Make your cuts deep inside the canopy, removing larger
stems at a crotch and remove an entire stem when you do. Do not cut it just
halfway back. Leave the newest growth on the remaining stems to bloom for you.
By opening the canopy for light you will see new sprouts being produced deeper
inside. These newer sprouts will produce wood for flowers later in the year and
over the next couple of years if you do not cut off the growing tips.

 Next
year, remove more older wood from deep inside the canopy and repeat this each
year “renewing” older wood and reinvigorating flowering. I hope this helps. I
attached two pictures of texas rangers taken in april. One was hedge pruned.
The other not. One is blooming. The hedge pruned one had all the growth cut off
that would have produced flowers.

2 thoughts on “How to Prune Texas Rangers”

  1. Why do landscapers prune most plants here in Las Vegas into squares and circles? They whack off the blooms just as plants are starting to bloom because they need to be shaped up AGAIN into squares and circles?

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