Pruning in June with Adam Frost

Adam Frost walking with trimmings from pruning

With a garden full of fresh growth and abundant flowers, pruning might not be at the top of your list of jobs to do this month. However, don’t leave your secateurs in the shed, because pruning now will help to get the best performance out of many garden plants. Spring- and early summer-flowering shrubs should be pruned now (once they’ve finished flowering) to encourage strong growth that will mature to become future-flowering wood.

It’s mostly a case of clever thinning, by cutting the oldest wood out from the base. This lets in light to stimulate new growth without the shape of the shrub changing.

Early-flowering climbers, like Clematis montana, can also be pruned and trained now to keep them from swamping your plant supports. The nesting season lasts until August, so check for nests in shrubs and climbers. If you have to leave it, you can do a lighter tidy-up of damaged or dead wood later in the summer and, hopefully, get back to thinning it next year. Add perennials to your list – some can be freshened up with a trim now. Chop back the tired flower stems of alchemilla, centaurea and hardy geraniums and you’ll be rewarded with another flush of flowers within weeks.

More pruning advice:


Plants to prune now

Pruning now encourages new juvenile growth that has the rest of the season to mature. Light pruning will help to thicken growth and shape plants. Wear gloves to protect your hands from sap.

Philadelphus

The flowers are over now, so cut the oldest stems out at the base, taking care not to damage the healthy wood as you work.

Clematis montana

Clematis montana 'Freda' in bloom

Trim back young shoots extending beyond the main structure and tie in any you want to train into shape for next year.

Variegated evergreen Elaeagnus

Prune out shoots with leaves reverting to green

Prune out shoots where the leaves are reverting to green – they are more vigorous and will take over if you leave them.

Euphorbia

All the old flower stems of euphorbia can be cut right back

All the old flower stems can be cut right back (wear gloves) to give the new shoots room to grow, ready for flowering next spring.


Avoid pruning

Leave trimming beech hedges until August to improve the winter display
Leave trimming beech hedges until August to improve the winter display
  • Beech hedges: Beech hedges will hold the newest leaves over winter if you delay trimming until the shortening days of July or August.
  • Cytisus: Broom is reluctant to grow back from older wood, so avoid pruning now, after flowering, or just give it the lightest trim on the newest growth.
  • Hydrangeas: Hydrangeas – as well as buddleia – are now forming this year’s flowers, so leave them and prune early next spring.
  • Wall-trained apples: These and pears need the energy provided by new shoots while the fruit is developing, so leave them until August, when you can cut them back to a bud.

Step-by-step: The Chelsea chop

Adam giving his geraniums the Chelsea chop

The Chelsea chop is a pruning technique that can be done on early flowering perennials to stimulate a new flush of leaves and flowers. Do it straight after flowering, before the plant wastes too much energy going to seed, and it will soon push up new growth for a second performance. It works earlier in the season on brunnera and pulmonaria, and later on for alchemilla, knautia and Salvia nemorosa. Early geraniums have flower stems that sprawl out from the centre, so chop them back now to get another neat flush and save neighbouring plants from being smothered.



from BBC Gardeners World Magazine https://ift.tt/NjkdzMr

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