The easiest and best way to deal with an ugly or too-large shrub
is to cut it to the ground. It
will do one of two things: die,
or grow back young and pretty. Either
is an improvement.
Don’t expect it to die; this is very rare, unless it is an
evergreen conifer, like an arborvitae or juniper. If you cut all the green off an
evergreen conifer, it will die; it has no storage in its roots. This can be a good thing.
If you cut a deciduous shrub to the ground in mid-summer, it may
come back very small, as its roots are emptiest at that time. If you cut it to the ground in
mid-winter to early spring, it will come roaring back, as its roots are full of
food at that time. If you
cut it to the ground right after blooming, no matter what time of year, it will
come back smaller than otherwise, as a plant expends a lot of energy in
blooming.
If you cut a broadleaf evergreen, like a rhododendron, to the
ground in midsummer, it will grow back; its roots are full of energy because it
hasn’t been living off root storage all spring, putting on growth, like the
deciduous shrubs, but it has more root storage than a conifer. If you cut one to the ground in spring
or right after bloom, it may disappear entirely; blooming takes a lot of
energy, and its root storage runs low in winter and early spring.
Sometimes a large shrub is simply growing into the way and you
don’t want to cut it down. Chopping
off the branch at the point where it begins to get in the way will ruin its
form and have it growing right back into your way. Cut the branch off at its base--or as
far back into the shrub as you can reach, if it’s a thick evergreen
conifer.
Some people insist in hedging, which is high-maintenance in the
fast-growing shrubs that are chosen for most hedges; they must be trimmed
several times through the growing season. Slower-growing shrubs, like camellia
and azalea, can be trimmed once a year and preserve their shape.
Hedge trimmers give a plant a haircut, but it’s a bad haircut,
with cut ends and leaves sticking out all over. The shrub also immediately grows out
from the buds below those cut ends and need trimming again. It is better to prune the twigs that
stick out too far one at a time, longest first, cutting them back to their
bases or even below, down to the next twig, eliminating the clusters of branch
bases that build up in the top of most hedged shrubs and catch falling leaves
and other debris. It won’t
be as tight as a hedge given a haircut, but it will look prettier, be
healthier, and go longer between trimmings.
Gardening is easy, if you do it naturally.
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