How To Prune Perennial Plants

Advertisement

Below are general instructions for pruning and deadheading perennial plants in the garden. Deadheading is a simple techinque which will give us a longer flowering season.


How To Deadhead

Deadheading flowers Deadheading is a simple task which takes a few minutes however adds days and sometimes weeks to your flowering display. If you've never dead-headed before here's how go about it:

First, keep a watchful eye on your flowering plants, paying close attention to blooms that are past their best. Once a flower has started to fade remove it from the plant with a quick snip from your pruners, alternatively, if stems are thin or soft, knip it off with your thumb and forefinger. When doing this try to remove just the spent flower leaving the new buds beneath intact.


The Many Benefits of Deadheading

Your beds and borders now look neater due to the lack of fading blooms, but how else has this deadheading process helped? By removing the spent flowers we have prevented the plant from setting seed which, if it did, would trigger the production of a hormone which causes flowering to shut down completely. So, by our slight tinkering with Mother Nature, we can often force the plant to put its energies into a second flush of flower production instead of seed production. Bear in mind that your planting should have a plentiful supply of nutrients to give a secondary flowering.


Cutting Back

Many perennial plants can benefit from a shearing or cut back during the season. Lantana and verbenas responds well to a mid-summer shearing, and will bloom heavier after doing so. Garden phlox and other perennials will produce a second flush of flowers when cut halfway back and fertilized after blooming.

At any time during the warm season it is okay to cut back dead or ugly foliage.

Use the Search feature at the top of every page of this website to find any specific plant. Once at the Plant File for that plant you will often find specific pruning instruction.


Winterizing Your Perennial Garden

When winter has arrived, and your perennials have either died back or stopped growing, you can first remove all dead foliage and then apply an inch or two of compost or mulch around plants. Leaves work great for mulch as well.


Other IMPORTANT Tips

WARNING: DO NOT prune lantana back during the Fall. Doing so insures death of the plant. The time to hard prune lantana is in mid to late Spring when new growth begins to emerge. At this time, prune back all dead stems to a point just above where new growth is emerging.

If you clean dead flower stems from your daylilies you might get a repeat bloom.

Cut butterfly bush back in late Winter to 6 to 36 inches from ground and deadhead flowers throughout the summer to encourage heavier flowering.

DO NOT kill the ants that visit your peonies. The ants eat the sticky residue that forms on peony buds allowing the flower to open.


SEE:

Cottage Gardens

Butterfly Gardens

Hummingbird Gardens

Shade Gardens

Rock Gardens

Container Gardening


Choose from a category below to find pruning instructions for other types of plants:


Featured Wilson Bros Plants

Most Popular Plants

Boxwood 'Harland Dwarf'   'Jack Frost' Ligustrum (Wax Leaf Privet)   Cryptomeria 'Globosa Nana' (Dwarf Cryptomeria)   'Canyon Creek' Abelia   Kaleidoscope Abelia   Magnolia 'Ann' (Tulip Tree)   Frost Proof Gardenia   Variegated Privet   Calisto Indian Hawthorne - Raphiolepis   Crape Myrtle 'Tonto' (Fauriei Hybrid)   Crape Myrtle 'Dynamite'   Asian Jasmine (Asiatic Jasmine)   Sonset Lantana   Creeping Yew (Prostrate Japanese Plum Yew)   Confederate Rose Hibiscus   Nandina 'Firepower'   Loropetalum 'Ever Red Sunset'   Gardenia 'Jubilation'   Viburnum Summer Snowflake   Gold Lace Juniper   Blue Mist Shrub - Caryopteris 'Longwood Blue'   Chrysanthemums - Hardy Garden Mums   Blue Star Creeper   Walker's Low Catmint   Arp Rosemary   Carolina Sapphire Cypress (Arizona Cypress)   Double Red Knock Out Rose   Winter Daphne   Autumn Joy Sedum   Loropetalum 'Purple Diamond'   Barberry 'Crimson Pygmy'   Burning Bush (Dwarf Winged Euonymus)   Cleyera Japonica (Japanese Cleyera)   Tea Olive (Fragrant Osmanthus)   Carissa Holly   Loropetalum 'Purple Pixie'   Compacta Holly (Japanese Holly)   Boxwood 'Wintergreen' (Korean Boxwood)   Golden Euonymus   Arborvitae Emerald Green   Gold Mound Spirea   Fragrant Orange Tea Olive   Loropetalum 'Plum Delight'   Indian Hawthorn Tree 'Rosalinda' (Rahiolepis)   Barberry 'Rosy Glow'   Loropetalum 'Emerald Snow'   Crape Myrtle 'Acoma' (Fauriei Hybrid)   Dwarf Yaupon Holly 'Bordeaux'   Lemon Scented Geranium - (Mosquito Plant)   Black Knight Butterfly Bush   Indian Hawthorn 'Snow White'   Daisy Gardenia - Kleim's Hardy Gardenia   Variegated Pittosporum   Aucuba 'Gold Dust'   Magnolia 'Little Gem' (Dwarf Southern Magnolia)   Creeping Gardenia (Dwarf)   Berkman's Golden Arborvitae