Want to Know WHEN to Prune? This Will Answer All of Your Questions!

Want to Know WHEN to Prune? This Will Answer All of Your Questions!

Introduction to Want to Know WHEN to Prune? This Will Answer All of Your Questions!

Learning when to prune can be confusing when there are different rules for many different plants, and even differing rules that vary by cultivar! This guide takes away all of that confusion by looking at the basics of how plants grow and using that as your foundation. With just a bit of logic, you can take these basics and apply them to most of the jobs in the home garden. Today, we’re covering the question,“When Should I Prune (…)?”If you would like to know HOW to prune, please click over toLearn How to Prune like a Pro! Pruning 101. There is a “best” time to prune various plants, and it’s not always the same.If you are trying to decide when to prune a particular plant in your yard, I suggest you look up your plant’s particular pruning guidelines in a garden book or online. If you are looking for a guide that you can use throughout the year to help you know what and when to prune with your specific garden in mind, then you will look at yourgrouping of garden plants as workers and decide where they are putting their energy.Let me explain! Plants, big or small, live their lives working towards the same goal: to grow to mature height, set fruit, then set seeds and continue the species. That’s their job. Think about plants doing their job in terms of energy. In spring, the plant’s energy is in the soil, moving its way up through the trunk and branches and forcing life in new growth. In summer, the energy exists in the trunk, branches, leaves, and flowers as it works to produce fruit. In the fall, the energy gives the tree a final push to set seeds, then drop leaves and head back down to the roots. In winter, the energy is stored in the roots, while what is above ground faces winter cold. Let’s use an unnamed deciduous tree as an example.This particular tree is dormant in the winter. In spring, it buds and leafs out. It sets flowers and fruit in summer and ripens to seed. The seeds are planted elsewhere bysquirrelscaching food for the winter. And in the fall, the plant drops its leaves to prepare for energy-saving winter dormancy again. Now, think of what response this plant will have to pruning based on where it is putting its energy. Now, of course, not all plants flower, fruit, set seeds, or go dormant at the same time of year.Some flower in the fall and fruit in the winter, others flower in winter and go dormant in the summer. And some plants skip various stages or go semi-dormant, like certain evergreens. Regardless, you can stillthink of where the energy is when pruning as a guide for when to prune. Thinking about when to prune in this way has greatly helped me in my quest to garden in a way that supports proper plant growth. It helps me towork with the plants and not against them, ensuring that they are healthy and well-loved, and most importantly, requiring less maintenance. If you have any tips, ideas, questions, or notes to share, please add them to the comments section. We can never have too much pruning help from wise gardeners! It would be similar thinking to the time of year. When will it cause the least stress to the plant? First thing in the morning, before the heat of the day, would be my choice. But I also choose based on the most efficient time for me to do it correctly. You never want to prune when the plant is under stress, unless you’re removing diseased, pest-ridden, dead, or damaged branches (as pruning can be how you SAVE your plant in this instance).Make sure the plant is hydrated and the weather conditions are good. For instance, you might not want to prune if there’s going to be extreme cold, or on the opposite end, a large heat wave.You also want to avoid pruning before the tree blooms, as you’ll remove the chance for new buds, flowers, and fruits. A city girl who learned to garden and it changed everything. Author, artist, Master Gardener. Better living through plants.

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