For many plants, pruning in late winter can ruin your flower display. But for these summer bloomers, it'll have the opposite ...
However, we do not need to dig and store canna rhizomes over the winter down here, so this is needless work. Up North, ...
Looking for a winter garden task? Pruning plants, shrubs, and trees can help improve growth and health. Here are some you ...
Pruning is an essential part of gardening. Not only does this practice help improve the overall look of your yard, but it can also promote healthier growth. Knowing how to prune is one thing—different ...
Although it's chilly and frosty, January is a great month to get on with pruning certain plants, according to an expert.
Warm winter days are perfect for garden prep. Try these 5 early tasks to get a head start on the growing season—no digging in ...
Prune rose of Sharon in late winter or early spring—this avoids disease and protects summer blooms. Pruning shapes the plant, improves airflow, and can rejuvenate older bushes if cut back heavily.
Though cold January offers little to do in the garden, some plants still appreciate a little love and care before spring arrives. Dormant fruit trees, blowsy hydrangeas and climbing roses could all do ...
Q: When should I prune my rose bushes? They never really go completely dormant, in that they keep their leaves and occasionally bloom throughout the winter. A: Although roses sometimes don’t go ...
The next few weeks are some of the year’s best for pruning landscape plants – mainly woody-stemmed ones that already have bloomed for the year, as well as most needled evergreens. Spring-blooming ...
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... Many gardens include at least one rose and perhaps several. Roses are dormant from late winter to early spring (when buds begin to swell), so now is the time ...
People soon won’t be able to stop and smell the roses in front of the Santa Barbara Mission, but only temporarily. Volunteers ...