Most gardeners love pruning, a task that can be beneficial or devastating, depending on your approach or the time of year! For the inexperienced gardener herbaceous perennials present less opportunity for a permanently damaging cut, as the underground part of the plant will generate new stems next season. Early autumn is an obvious time for cutting back perennials as the summer growth starts to lack lustre, and in some cases does little for the overall appearance of the garden.
Cutting Back Perennials
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Cutting Back Perennials – Hostas
The Beauty of Seedheads
Some herbaceous perennials have persistent stems and seedheads. Although dead, and usually devoid of their deciduous leaves the stems and seedheads stand proud in the winter garden. They are a feature in the border, especially when etched with frost on winter mornings; many are appreciated by birds that search out their ripe seeds. Prairie flowers such as rudbeckia and echinacea for example retain straight stems with cone shaped seedheads, particularly attractive against the fine waving leaves of parchment winter grasses.
Sedum spectabile retains its drying fleshy stems and dark purple-pink fading flowers that simply become more sophisticated as they turn to chestnut. The impatient, over tidy gardener will miss these delights if the secateurs come out before late winter.
Alchemilla mollis
Cutting Back Perennials
Cutting back perennials before autumn is not always the right thing to do, some display wonderful colour if their foliage is left alone. Euphorbia griffithii ‘Fireglow’ is a good example. After its spectacular spring display of glowing bracts ‘Fireglow’ can become a rather untidy mass of stems and narrow green leaves. The temptation may be to cut it back at this point but this will sacrifice a superb display of orange and red autumn shades that lasts for several weeks.
Geraniums
So what do you do about cutting back perennials to keep the garden looking good over winter? Share your knowledge – let’s hear your tips and advice……