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Home / Garden Blog / Which Plants Should You Prune in Fall?
Which Plants Should You Prune in Fall?
- Susan Martin
Once the summer heat subsides, we’re drawn back out into the garden to enjoy the cool, colorful days of fall. Sensing their imminent dormancy, our plants put on an exuberant show as if to say, “Don’t forget me! I’ll be back next year!”
In just six to eight short weeks, my garden shifts from glorious green to a golden jubilee. It is beautiful in every season, but I always miss the flowers when they go.
Once the plants in my garden have gone mostly or completely dormant in late fall, it’s time to prepare for winter. I grow a wide variety of annuals, perennials, trees and shrubs in this border, and I don’t treat every plant the same. I listen and observe, letting the plants tell me how they’d like to be handled, and I pair that with some solid horticultural knowledge. Follow the lists below and you can’t go wrong.
What I don’t prune in fall:
- Anything evergreen or semi-evergreen, whether it’s a perennial, tree or shrub
- Woody perennials like Russian sage, lavender, perennial Hibiscus and St. John’s wort
- Any perennials that look pretty with a fresh dusting of snow, like the rusty brown plumes of Astilbe
- Shrubs with berried branches or colorful stems that bring vibrancy to the winter garden
- Plants that provide food or shelter for birds and other critters over the winter such as ornamental grasses
- Plants with hollow stems like delphiniums – to prevent moisture from traveling down the stems into the crown of the plant
Any shrubs that bloom on old wood (the previous season’s growth) including azalea, sweetshrub, forsythia, bigleaf hydrangea, mountain hydrangea, oakleaf hydrangea, lilac, ninebark and weigela. Trimming them in fall would eliminate next year’s flowers.
What I do prune in late fall:
- Any perennials that have gone completely dormant and will have mushy foliage if I leave it through winter like hosta, tall garden phlox, brunnera, lilies, bleeding hearts, daylilies, Ligularia, catmint, bee balm, peonies and salvia. Slugs love to lay their eggs in dormant foliage like this.
- Any perennials or roses with diseased foliage – bag and dispose of these instead of adding them to your compost or brush pile
- Any plants with broken branches or those that have grown over my pathways, windows or roof
Notice my “don’t prune” list is much longer than my “do prune” list for fall. Spring is a better time to prune many types of shrubs and evergreen perennials to get them off to a good start for the new season. Remember, shrubs don’t need to be pruned to bloom and grow. If you’re not sure when to prune, a good rule of thumb is just don’t do it!
- Categories: Cultural Care, Garden Perennials, Landscape Plantings
- Tags: fall garden tasks, fall gardening, fall pruning
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6 thoughts on “Which Plants Should You Prune in Fall?”
I leave tall sedums through winter. The seed heads are interesting after a snow and gives texture to an otherwise dismal landscape.
Thank you – this was very helpful.
Thank you for all this information, it really helps!!!
Thank you for this list. Pruning is always a topic that makes me uncertain . This list answers many of my questions. One remaining question is if or when to prune hellebores. I’ll await your response.
I personally trim in the Fall. But that being said, you may not need to trim them at all. You can selectively trim any dead leaves off.
This was a most informative article.