Also receive the Daily newsletter including gardening tips, weather, astronomical events, and more.
Planting, Growing, and Pruning Gardenias
ADVERTISEMENT
Same issue. I absolutely love gardenias! Bought two, one for each side of my front door. Leaves are now turning yellow. I am soo sad!
I have a row of old variety Gardenia bushes that have gotten quite tall and lanky, and when it rains, their limbs droop very badly. I want to cut them back. My bushes go back to a bush my mother had planted in her yard when I was a young girl, and I am now 70 years old. She never trimmed or cut back her bush. You told how to trim or cut back Gardenia's, but you did not say when to trim or cut them back. I know you don't do it in the spring before they bloom because you would lose the blossoms, but do you cut them back shortly after they bloom, or do you wait until fall to do it?
Hi, Sandra, You have the right idea: Gardenias bloom on new wood. Major pruning should be done after spring blooming. Minor trimming can be done at any time. If you want the plants to be less spindly, try this three-step procedure: Prune lightly in early fall, removing about 25 percent of the foliage. Prune again in early March, giving the shrub shape but leaving all lower growth alone. Prune the third time after bloom, heading back many large limbs so that they will develop dense foliage through the summer. We hope this helps.