Xtremehorticulture

Pruning Shrubs Correctly

Q. Attached you will see my 25-year-old bottle brush bush. As you can see, it needs some attention. Can I shape it a bit by trimming it back without harming it? The only trimming I have done is clipping off brown ends each spring (none this year) caused by winter cold. It displays beautiful color for several weeks when the weather warms up. 25 year old Bottle brush shrub A. Yes but be careful and don’t let the landscape maintenance clods ruin the plant by shearing it with a hedge shears. You may want to consider separation between branches or removing offending branches altogether. It requires either cutting the plant to the ground OR selectively removing some of the older stems. Whether it produces suckers or not will tell you which way to prune it. Either way requires deep pruning cuts, not using a hedge shears.            Never use a hedge shears unless you want to replace the shrub in a few years. Hedge shears are for pruning a hedge. That’s why the tool used is called a “hedge shears”! If it flowers in the spring, then prune it immediately after it finishes flowering so it has time to grow and produce wood for new flowers. Formal hedges require quite a bit of work and time. Because they are formal, attention needs to be spent on them once a month. Anything growing “out of place” is cut back with a hedges shears. https://www.hedgesonline.co.uk/formal-hedging An informal hedge accomplishes the same thing but with far less work. https://laidbackgardener.blog/2016/06/29/a-hedge-for-laidback-gardeners/             In your case, use a hand pruners and snip three or four branches from each side of the plant, deep inside it, and select where to open it up. Hide your pruning cuts at least 12 to 18 inches inside your shrub. Reach deep inside your shrub. There are several places to prune. Move your hand to each crotch. Ask yourself, “If I were to remove that stem, how would it look?”            Because it’s so dense on all sides, “cut at a crotch” and remove an entire offending branch or stem. Concentrate on removing stems or branches that are growing down or up. From each section of the shrub remove a stem so the remaining branches are more open and can “breathe”. Remove no more than about ¼ of the branches every three years or so. It will not need more than that. Pruning with a hedge shears may look okay when the shrub is young, but as it gets older the shrubs older wood needs to be removed. This requires a few well-placed cuts deep inside the shrub.             When you are finished pruning, the shrub it should look like it was never pruned. That’s the mark of a good pruning job. Who wants to look at an ugly shrub until it grows back? Also spring is the time to apply an iron fertilizer/chelate to the soil to cure the yellowing that occurs on this plant.

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Texas Ranger (Sage) Getting Woody

What should I do and when should I do it? Q. My Texas rangers have become very woody. Each have 2-2gph emitters and are watered for 40 min. 3 times each week. One is close to other plants and is probably stealing water from them. So, what should I do and when should I do it? A. Basically they have been pruned with a hedge shears or pruned like they were hedged. This has caused the outside of the canopy to become thin with lots of interior older wood. It will get progressively more like this with time and become more and more sparse unless the plants are allowed to get much larger. You have three options.             Let them get larger. This will allow them to put on sufficient new growth on the outside to cover up the sparseness of the foliage and the very old interior wood.             Second, you can do some corrective pruning. This may make them ugly for a couple of seasons but you will be on your way to re-establishing the plants with a better appearance and longer life. This would require two to three cuts deep inside the canopy, opening the canopy for new growth and re-establishing a new canopy. A caveat. I did not do this pruning but I saw it and it demonstrates an idea. The idea is the concept of renewal pruning. Renewal pruning is cutting back about 1/4 to 1/3 of the shrub every couple of years so that you have a “new” shrub every 6 to 10 years. This helps keep the shrub green from top to bottom and avoids it from getting woody at the base.             This will leave them looking like a gap-toothed 7 seven year old for a few months until they fill in. Next year remove two more and let it recover. By the third year you should have removed most of the older wood and the shrub should be well on its way to looking and performing better.             From that point forward you would renew prune the shrub every two or three years. This means that every two or three years you could take out maybe two of the oldest stems from the base and let it regrow out. That is all the pruning required on this plant. Another option is called rejuvenation pruning.This is basically cutting the shrub to within a couple of inches of the top of the soil or mulch and letting it regrow from these “stubs”. This does not work with all shrubs so make sure it works on the shrub you are thinking of doing it to before you do it. If you are not sure it will work on a specific shrub, cut one of the stems back to a couple of inches and watch what happens during the next growing season. Cutting shrubs down within a few inches of the soil or mulch surface is called rejuvenation pruning. Oleanders respond well to this type of pruning. Be careful though because not all shrubs will respond favorably to this drastic form of pruning.              Here is a shrub that was attacked by a hedge shears. Notice that there is sucker growth coming from the base. This is an excellent sign that this shrub is a candidate for either renewal or rejuvenation pruning.  Third is to pull them out and replace them and start pruning them the correct way which is without a hedge shears but two or three deep cuts every two to three years.

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