Pruning is one of the most critical gardening tasks,
determining whether the garden plants will develop satisfactorily or
not. Carried out correctly and at the right time, the trees grow in the
desired manner, the bushes look lush, green and healthy, and the
flowering plants brighten up the garden with color. Performed at the
wrong time, serious, long-term damage can be inflicted on the trees,
the shrubs and bushes are liable to develop an open, "leggy" habit and
many herb plants and sub-shrubs, while green on top, become bald and
unattractive below. In a nutshell, when it comes to pruning, timing is
crucial.
Deciduous trees and landscape shrubs
The
one group of plants that should not be pruned in the spring is plants
that naturally drop their leaves during the winter. In the dormant
season, carbohydrates and mineral nutrients dissolved in sap are stored
in the plant's tissues. At the onset of spring, the sap rises in the
plant and is carried to all its growing points. Pruning cuts carried
out at the time when this process is occurring, causes the sap to
"bleed" out of the plant, thus causing it to lose vital energy sources.
Arboriculturists today, believe that maintaining a positive energy
level in a tree, is the single most crucial factor for its long-term
health and survival. Deciduous plants should of course, have been
pruned in the winter.
Evergreen trees and shrubs
This
is precisely the best time of year to prune evergreens and plants
sensitive to cold, which should not have been touched during the
winter. As the spring, especially in Mediterranean and hot, dry, summer
climates, is the principle growing season for most garden plants, it is
best to direct the new growth just as it is beginning. Conversely,
pruning tissue a month or two after it has sprouted means that the tree
or shrub has expended vital energy, for no purpose.
Flowering Shrubs
Despite
the above, care must be taken when it comes to flowering shrubs.
Amongst deciduous species, one has to know whether the flower buds
develop on the current year's spring growth, or on that of the previous
year. Not a few home gardeners are disappointed with their lilac bushes
for instance, which "never seem to flower", the reason being that they
dutifully prune the shrubs in the winter, thereby removing the flower
buds in the process! Such plants, which include some shrub and species
roses, should be lightly pruned after the flowers have withered.
Flowering
evergreen shrubs rarely if ever belong to this category, and so for the
most part should be pruned in the spring. Pruning shrubs is largely a
matter of removing old and dead growth, and shortening branches by
between a third and a half, in order to encourage dense and compact
growth.
Tree pruning on the other hand is all about careful
shaping so that the growth pattern appears as natural as possible. This
should apply in my opinion as much to fruit trees as to ornamentals in
a private garden. While farmers cut back branches in order to extract
more fruit from the tree, and also to make the picking more
economically efficient, the tree in a garden has amongst other
purposes, a vital aesthetic role to play and should be treated as such.
Its long term health should never be forgotten either.
I've
been gardening in a professional capacity since 1984. I am the former
head gardener of the Jerusalem Botanical Garden, but now concentrate on
building gardens for private home owners. I also teach horticulture to
students on training courses. I'd love to help you get the very best
from your garden, so you're welcome to visit me on http://www.dryclimategardening.comor contact me at
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