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10 Plants You Should Never Prune in Fall


We’re nearing the holidays and that means your doofus husband will be looking to work off excess turkey-and-stuffing pounds by hacking back some innocent tree or shrub. Which ones are OK to hack? More importantly, for which ones should you threaten his most valued appendage if he so much as touches them? Grumpy has the answers.

Bloom Time Is the Key
Many of the commonly butchered shrubs and trees bloom in spring. This means that they’ve already formed their flower buds. So if Doofus goes nuts with the loppers and wails away on a spring-bloomer this weekend, he’ll cut off the flower buds and you won’t get any spring blooms. Therefore, DO NOT LET HIM CHOP ON THE FOLLOWING:

    t

  1. Azalea
  2. t

  3. Flowering cherry, peach, plum, pear, crabapple
  4. t

  5. Forsythia
  6. t

  7. Lilac
  8. t

  9. Loropetalum
  10. t

  11. Oakleaf hydrangea
  12. t

  13. Rhododendron
  14. t

  15. Saucer or star magnolia
  16. t

  17. Spirea
  18. t

  19. Viburnum

Plants that are OK to prune now are those that make their flower buds on new growth next year. They include:

    t

  1. Angel’s trumpet
  2. t

  3. ‘Annabelle’, ‘Limelight’, and PG hydrangea
  4. t

  5. Butterfly bush
  6. t

  7. Cape plumbago
  8. t

  9. Chaste tree
  10. t

  11. Crepe myrtle*
  12. t

  13. Gardenia
  14. t

  15. Goldenrain tree
  16. t

  17. Hibiscus
  18. t

  19. ‘Knockout’ and most shrub roses
  20. t

  21. Pomegranate

* Extreme pruning of crepe myrtle called “crepe murder” will not and cannot be tolerated by Grumpy. To see how to correctly prune this iconic plant, read “Crepe Myrtle Pruning Step-By-Step.”

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