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Do NOT cut many of your perennials back in the fall. Here’s our list of which perennials to leave alone and which to cut back. Also, here is advice on when and how to cut back perennials to avoid damage and disease.
While our annual flowers are one-hit wonders and turn black after frost, many of us wonder when to cut down different perennial plants. The guidance on “when†and “what†to cut has changed over time.
In my garden, we no longer cut down every perennial plant in the fall. As in nature, many perennials find that their dying leaves protect them from the cold and provide natural fertilizer. Plus, the plant stems are good for pollinators.
Perennials NOT to Cut Back
Technically, very few plants MUST be cut down in the fall. And never rush to cut things down; hold off until after several hard frosts. Even if the flowers or leaves are dead, the roots reclaim energy from the dying plant for healthy growth in the spring.
We enjoy leaving as many flower seedheads standing as possible to add winter interest and feed the birds in cold weather. If you follow nature’s lead, the decomposing leaves not only insulate the plant during the winter freezes and thaws but also decompose to provide excellent (and free) fertilizer, saving you time and money in the spring.
Plus, particular perennials should be left alone. This list includes:
Evergreen perennials such as epimediums, hellebores, heucheras, hardy geraniums, dianthus, moss phlox, and euphorbias
Candytuft, primulas, hens & chicks, heaths, and heathers (considered evergreen and should not be cut back in the fall). Tidy them in the spring as needed.
Also, do not cut back hardy perennials like garden mums (Chrysanthemum spp.), anise hyssop (Agastache foeniculum), red-hot poker (Kniphofia uvaria), and Montauk daisy (Nipponanthemum nipponicum). Leave the foliage. It’s important to protect the root crowns over winter. Cutting back the plants severely will simulate late new growth, which will be very susceptible to winter kill.
Pulmonaria and penstemons should also be left in place until spring.
Always cut back on any infected or diseased plants! Badly damaged or infested foliage should be cut back and removed from infected plants.
Which Perennials to Cut Back
However, some perennial plants are more susceptible to problems if the old foliage and dying stems are left to rot. Diseases can overwinter in dead foliage, as can slugs and other pests. Old stems can also get battered about by fall and winter winds, which will damage the plant’s crown and roots.
Specifically, there is a small handful of perennials that we recommend cutting back in the fall, namely:
Bee balm and phlox are prone to powdery mildew, so cut them back once the flowers finish.
Peonies to keep fungal diseases from spreading. Gather a handful of stems and cut them off 2 to 3 inches above the soil.
Hosta foliage after a hard frost, including any leaves on the ground, as they may harbor slug eggs and prevent new spring growth. Don’t cut the leaves to the ground, though. Instead, leave about 2 to 3 inches of each stem standing to protect the crown during winter.
Bearded irises need a clean garden bed to stay disease-free. The iris borers’ eggs overwinter on the leaves and stems of the mother plant; by cutting the leaves back and destroying them, you can help reduce or even eliminate borers from your garden. Wait until after the first frost because the iris borer moth remains active until then.
If it bothers you to keep the dead and dying perennials standing in your garden bed, see this list of perennials that can be cut down in the autumn. Most plants that flower in early spring or summer can be cut down in the fall.
After several hard frosts, remove spent flowers and stems by cutting stems off near the base of the plant, allowing the crown (base of the plant) to remain. Bypass pruners are preferred because they make a clean cut through the plant’s stem, whereas anvil pruners crush the stem, leaving more damage behind.
I usually leave 6-inch stubs so I can find the plants next spring. Don’t go any lower than 2-inch stubs; you don’t want to accidentally dig into plants that emerge late, like butterfly weed, rose mallow, and balloon flower. You will be less likely to dig into them accidentally before they appear in spring if you can see some of their stalks.
Note: Some late summer or fall perennials and biennials may have already started to form leaves for next year at the base of the plant. Examples include yarrow, foxglove, Shasta daisy, and globe thistle. When cutting back, be sure to leave these rosettes of green. Cut off the stalks without disturbing this new growth.
After cutting back your plants, apply a light mulch. Then, wait to feed until the spring for healthy growth.
Don’t Be Afraid to Leave Some Winter Interest!
Again, try leaving some seedheads standing for winter interest or to feed the birds. Here are some favorites:
The blackberry lily (Belamcanda) looks great until heavy wet snow finally knocks it down.
Ornamental grasses add movement and sound to the landscape.
Native sedum, Joe Pye weed, and oxeye sunflower (Heliopsis helianthoides) can all wait until spring to be cut back, when new growth arrives. In addition to the birds, butterflies and beneficial insects shelter in these native plants and their leaf litter.
If you don’t want certain plants to reseed, snip spent flowers back just below the mound of foliage for a tidy look. Perennials that will self-seed include:
Purple coneflower (Echinacea)
Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia)
Blanket flower (Gaillardia)
Globe thistle (Echinops ritro)
Solomon’s seal (Polygonatum)
Clean Up Garden Debris
As with the vegetable garden, any diseased or bug-infested plant material needs to go—far away! Please don’t put it in the compost pile. Debris from rusty hollyhocks, peonies with powdery mildew, leaf-spotted delphiniums, and other fungal-infected flowers should be removed from the garden.
Don’t Fertilize in the Fall
Fertilizing in autumn encourages new growth that will get killed when cold weather hits. Compost is not considered a fertilizer; it is a soil conditioner, so feel free to add that in the fall. If your soil test indicates that you need lime, it can also be applied in the fall.
Weed Before the Freeze
Before the ground freezes, do a final weeding. The more weeds you can get out now, especially those with seeds, the fewer weeds you’ll have to deal with in the spring. Edge your beds for one last time, and you’ll start the year with a neat, tidy look.
To Mulch or Not to Mulch?
If you are growing hardy plants in your zone and live where snow cover is plentiful each winter, you probably don’t have to worry about mulching your garden, though it’s always insurance to give them extra protection. It’s newly planted perennials that are the exception. Tuck some mulch around them for their first winter.
The purpose of a winter mulch is to keep the soil temperature even and prevent the heaving of roots due to alternate freezing and thawing of the ground. Waiting until the ground is frozen before mulching is best for your plants and discourages rodents from making a cozy home there. Use a mulch that does not pack down and smother your plants. Shredded leaves, pine needles, straw, or evergreen boughs are good choices. Snow provides the best insulating mulch; it goes down gradually and melts gradually.
If you live where it has been dry this growing season, keep watering your garden until the ground freezes. Usually, there is plentiful moisture in the fall, but many areas have experienced drought conditions in recent summers, and the ground is dry. Water-stressed plants will have a tough time surviving the winter.
The more work you do in your perennial garden this fall, the less you’ll have to do next spring!
Does the advice on pruning-back Clematis pertain to my multi-flora ''devil's darning-needle'' too? I know link-clicks contribute to better search-engine results-page listings ranking but...
Also I didn't see forsythia mentioned in my quick-reading for that name. That's why I clicked the link in the email. I have an older variety planted B4 showier cultivars which were never systematically pruned or fertilized to improve bloom density. They were recently transplanted from deep shade beneath a shingle-oak to a sunnier more open area and have achieved both greater foliar development and blossom densities. I've heard they benefit from some type of systematic pruning and undoubtedly some sort of fertilization would help too. Did my ancient eyes just miss them or were they mentioned within some broader taxonimic nomenclature I didn't recognize?
It's no ''biggy'' and the move has worked wonders but since I put that much effort into 'em I was considering pruning/fertilization to effect even better results since they're now visible from the street.
In your article, you mentioned penstemons twice --- once it seemed to say "cut back" and later in the article it seemed to say "leave alone." Which is the right way to handle them in fall?
Strawberries do not like winter weather; the plants should be mulched in fall before temperatures drop below +20 F. However, allow the strawberry plants to harden or acclimate to cool fall temperatures before mulching the planting. Plants that are mulched prematurely are more susceptible to winter injury than those that are mulched after they have been properly hardened. Excellent mulching materials include clean, weed-free oat, wheat or soybean straw. Chopped cornstalks are another possibility. Leaves are not a good winter mulch for strawberries. Leaves can mat together in layers, trapping air and creating space for ice to form. The leaf, air and ice layers do not provide adequate protection. Leaf mulch actually may damage plants due to excess moisture trapped under the material. The depth of the mulch should be 3 to 5 inches at application. The material should eventually settle to 2 to 4 inches. In windy, exposed areas, straw mulches can be kept in place by placing wire or plastic fencing over the area. The fencing can be held in place with bricks or other heavy objects.
Another option is a strawberry pyramid, a type of raised bed. In winter, temperatures in raised beds may be several degrees colder than ground level plantings. Because of colder temperatures, strawberry plants growing in raised beds require more protection that ground level sites. Place 6 to 8 inches of straw or chopped cornstalks on strawberry pyramids or other raised beds in fall.
I have heard that it is best not to get back perennials at all because many beneficial bugs hibernate in the stalks. With massive declining bug populations, we need to help them survive the winters.