Tips for Pruning in Winter and Early Spring
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It depends on what type of bushes you have. Some varieties are more sensitive to winter scarring than others. Don't prune more this winter. Wait for spring growth and hopefully your bushes will be fine.
I have a bush/tree that blooms small pretty purple flowers. It can be cut into a bush or trim bottom limbs and it grows into a tree.
We had our first freeze about a week ago and it really froze the it. The trunk and limbs look ok.
The blooms are at the top of the limb and have many little balls that open up with the purple color.
I live in North Texas and this is my first year with this plant and need to know if and when to trim it back.
Thanks, Deb
It's hard to give pruning advice not knowing what type of blooming bush you have. Some bushes are pruned in early spring when they are dormant and others are pruned right after they are done blooming. Try to find out what type of bush you have before pruning. Look in catalogs or online to see if you can find a similar bush. Or next year, when it is blooming, take a sample to your local garden center for help.
WHEN is late winter in Southwest Oklahoma? We can have fruit trees starting to bud out quite early some years ... first of March.
In Oklahoma, the best time to prune fruit trees is from late February to early March. Many folks in southern Oklahomam prune in February. Just don't prune too early in winter or the trees are susceptible to injury. Check with your local county cooperative extension.
I always wait for my hydrangea to put on leaves before I cut them back, otherwise I don't get any blooms. I cut the dead parts from the branch ends after leaves have formed. This way I am sure I have cut only what needs to be cut. Then I have beautiful blooms in the Spring. Hydrangea is one of my favorite perenials except that no matter what I try mine all turn out blue or purple, no pinks or reds. I've tried all of the tricks I've ever read to get pink ones, even bought a red one, and a pink one, but when they bloom the next year they are blue. So - I just enjoy my beautiful blue ones and the red one turned purple and is beautiful. By the way, I live in LA., may make a difference in pruning times and techniques. I'm not sure.
The color of the Hydrangea is determines by the PH of the soil. Ask at your local garden shop or look it up on line which soil ph determines what color. Here in SC most of our bushes turn out white or light pink because our soil is acidic. Out west most soils are alkaline you can test your soil with an inexpensive soil test kit or send a sample to your local college extension program to get it tested for ph and a list of what to do to get your plants to bloom another color. Jeff Davis Associate Degree horticulture.
Here in Missouri we can play with the soil, I added the acidifier, and ended up with the most beautiful bush of all colors! I called it the Baby Shower Hydrangea! I was blessed with every color! Mixed on one bush! However I will confess to adding nails to the soil 3 years ago that I know will rust to acidify, hoping to get the very blue!
I have the opposite problem... my blooms are always pink, and I can't get any blue ones! I also wait until the leaves form to prune. It looks strange for a month or so, but if I cut the stems before that, they don't bloom. Two years ago, my bushes started flowering, but the flowers all faded and shriveled. Not sure what happened. This year, I hardly had any blooms on that bush. Hopefully this year they'll make a nice showing!
Soil PH is the determining factor for color on this plant. as for the flower prefall it could be a water stress problem or a disease. Check with your local plant nursery or garden shop for more on the problem. Also see my answer to LA for a further explaination of the effects of PH of soil on Hydrangea