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#1
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Pruning of mystery bush
I have a large bush in my garden, about 1m x 5m in size. It loses most
of its leaves in the winter. It has grown a bit too big for its location. Please see pictures: http://i40.tinypic.com/rc4g81.jpg http://i41.tinypic.com/nq2vsk.jpg Can anyone tell me: 1) If I cut it back fairly brutally now, will it regrow leaves in the spring? 2) What is it? 3) What evergreen plants I could replace it with, because it looks quite ugly in winter. Thanks. |
#2
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Pruning of mystery bush
On Sat, 14 Jan 2012 12:50:54 +0000, RustyFiesta
wrote: I have a large bush in my garden, about 1m x 5m in size. It loses most of its leaves in the winter. It has grown a bit too big for its location. Please see pictures: http://i40.tinypic.com/rc4g81.jpg http://i41.tinypic.com/nq2vsk.jpg Can anyone tell me: 1) If I cut it back fairly brutally now, will it regrow leaves in the spring? 2) What is it? 3) What evergreen plants I could replace it with, because it looks quite ugly in winter. Thanks. As to what it is, I'm guessing that it's a form of lonicera. Looking at what foliage there is, I'd also guess that it's one sick plant. The green looks fairly healthy and that points to an evergreen but the amount of dead stuff means the plant isn't getting enough nutrient through to maintain foliage higher up. If it is lonicera, hard pruning will rejuvenate it (I have one bush that I cut almost to ground every few years and within a year it's a metre high again and about the same across). OTOH, whatever it is, digging it out will allow you a chance to put something more interesting and variable into what is (at 5m) a rather big area. You don't say where you are in the UK so the following little list is of plants that should do ok almost anywhere and in any soil conditions. All are evergreen. Berberis darwinii (yellow flowers May-June, followed by berries with which you can make jam) Viburnums - these flower December to April followed by dark blue berries Phormiums (New Zealand Flax) - these have sword like leaves, available in a range of colours. They don't flower but you get the year round leaf colour. Euonymus - Evergreen varieties often have variegated foliage There are lots more options but a selection of the above will give you a decent colour variety for interest throughout the year. Just remember to prune them annually so they don't get out of hand like the plant you've currently got. Cheers, Jake ======================================= Urgling happily from the dryer end of Swansea Bay. |
#3
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Pruning of mystery bush
On Jan 14, 3:17*pm, Jake Nospam@invalid wrote:
On Sat, 14 Jan 2012 12:50:54 +0000, RustyFiesta wrote: I have a large bush in my garden, about 1m x 5m in size. It loses most of its leaves in the winter. It has grown a bit too big for its location. Please see pictures: http://i40.tinypic.com/rc4g81.jpg http://i41.tinypic.com/nq2vsk.jpg Can anyone tell me: 1) If I cut it back fairly brutally now, will it regrow leaves in the spring? 2) What is it? 3) What evergreen plants I could replace it with, because it looks quite ugly in winter. Thanks. As to what it is, I'm guessing that it's a form of lonicera. Looking at what foliage there is, I'd also guess that it's one sick plant. The green looks fairly healthy and that points to an evergreen but the amount of dead stuff means the plant isn't getting enough nutrient through to maintain foliage higher up. If it is lonicera, hard pruning will rejuvenate it (I have one bush that I cut almost to ground every few years and within a year it's a metre high again and about the same across). OTOH, whatever it is, digging it out will allow you a chance to put something more interesting and variable into what is (at 5m) a rather big area. You don't say where you are in the UK *so the following little list is of plants that should do ok almost anywhere and in any soil conditions. All are evergreen. Berberis darwinii (yellow flowers May-June, followed by berries with which you can make jam) Viburnums - these flower December to April followed by dark blue berries Phormiums (New Zealand Flax) - these have sword like leaves, available in a range of colours. They don't flower but you get the year round leaf colour. Euonymus - Evergreen varieties often have variegated foliage There are lots more options but a selection of the above will give you a decent colour variety for interest throughout the year. Just remember to prune them annually so they don't get out of hand like the plant you've currently got. Cheers, Jake ======================================= Urgling happily from the dryer end of Swansea Bay.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I used to grow it Jake, remember this is winter and almost all lonicera have shed their leaves, it will green up again in the spring, I had a customer that had a few as cover for partridges she was breeding, also a good nesting site for some small birds. Just racking my brains trying to think back about 15 years for the name. David @ the wet end of Swansea Bay |
#4
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Pruning of mystery bush
On Sat, 14 Jan 2012 08:07:04 -0800 (PST), Dave Hill
wrote: On Jan 14, 3:17*pm, Jake Nospam@invalid wrote: On Sat, 14 Jan 2012 12:50:54 +0000, RustyFiesta wrote: I have a large bush in my garden, about 1m x 5m in size. It loses most of its leaves in the winter. It has grown a bit too big for its location. Please see pictures: http://i40.tinypic.com/rc4g81.jpg http://i41.tinypic.com/nq2vsk.jpg Can anyone tell me: 1) If I cut it back fairly brutally now, will it regrow leaves in the spring? 2) What is it? 3) What evergreen plants I could replace it with, because it looks quite ugly in winter. Thanks. As to what it is, I'm guessing that it's a form of lonicera. Looking at what foliage there is, I'd also guess that it's one sick plant. The green looks fairly healthy and that points to an evergreen but the amount of dead stuff means the plant isn't getting enough nutrient through to maintain foliage higher up. If it is lonicera, hard pruning will rejuvenate it (I have one bush that I cut almost to ground every few years and within a year it's a metre high again and about the same across). OTOH, whatever it is, digging it out will allow you a chance to put something more interesting and variable into what is (at 5m) a rather big area. You don't say where you are in the UK *so the following little list is of plants that should do ok almost anywhere and in any soil conditions. All are evergreen. Berberis darwinii (yellow flowers May-June, followed by berries with which you can make jam) Viburnums - these flower December to April followed by dark blue berries Phormiums (New Zealand Flax) - these have sword like leaves, available in a range of colours. They don't flower but you get the year round leaf colour. Euonymus - Evergreen varieties often have variegated foliage There are lots more options but a selection of the above will give you a decent colour variety for interest throughout the year. Just remember to prune them annually so they don't get out of hand like the plant you've currently got. Cheers, Jake ======================================= Urgling happily from the dryer end of Swansea Bay.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I used to grow it Jake, remember this is winter and almost all lonicera have shed their leaves, it will green up again in the spring, I had a customer that had a few as cover for partridges she was breeding, also a good nesting site for some small birds. Just racking my brains trying to think back about 15 years for the name. David @ the wet end of Swansea Bay The typical flowering honeysuckles shed their leaves; nitida is pure foliage and evergreen. Pilata is semi evergreen but wouldn't reach a metre high. I have a youthful hedge of nitida fertilis and several Baggesen's Gold dotted around - it is the latter variety of which I chop one to ground every few years. Another Gold had the chop treatment for the first time in the autumn and is already starting to grow and leaf up again. Cheers, Jake ======================================= Urgling happily from the dryer end of Swansea Bay. |
#5
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Pruning of mystery bush
On Jan 14, 4:16*pm, Jake Nospam@invalid wrote:
On Sat, 14 Jan 2012 08:07:04 -0800 (PST), Dave Hill wrote: On Jan 14, 3:17*pm, Jake Nospam@invalid wrote: On Sat, 14 Jan 2012 12:50:54 +0000, RustyFiesta wrote: I have a large bush in my garden, about 1m x 5m in size. It loses most of its leaves in the winter. It has grown a bit too big for its location. Please see pictures: http://i40.tinypic.com/rc4g81.jpg http://i41.tinypic.com/nq2vsk.jpg Can anyone tell me: 1) If I cut it back fairly brutally now, will it regrow leaves in the spring? 2) What is it? 3) What evergreen plants I could replace it with, because it looks quite ugly in winter. Thanks. As to what it is, I'm guessing that it's a form of lonicera. Looking at what foliage there is, I'd also guess that it's one sick plant. The green looks fairly healthy and that points to an evergreen but the amount of dead stuff means the plant isn't getting enough nutrient through to maintain foliage higher up. If it is lonicera, hard pruning will rejuvenate it (I have one bush that I cut almost to ground every few years and within a year it's a metre high again and about the same across). OTOH, whatever it is, digging it out will allow you a chance to put something more interesting and variable into what is (at 5m) a rather big area. You don't say where you are in the UK *so the following little list is of plants that should do ok almost anywhere and in any soil conditions. All are evergreen. Berberis darwinii (yellow flowers May-June, followed by berries with which you can make jam) Viburnums - these flower December to April followed by dark blue berries Phormiums (New Zealand Flax) - these have sword like leaves, available in a range of colours. They don't flower but you get the year round leaf colour. Euonymus - Evergreen varieties often have variegated foliage There are lots more options but a selection of the above will give you a decent colour variety for interest throughout the year. Just remember to prune them annually so they don't get out of hand like the plant you've currently got. Cheers, Jake ======================================= Urgling happily from the dryer end of Swansea Bay.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I used to grow it Jake, remember this is winter and almost all lonicera have shed their leaves, it will green up again in the spring, I had a customer that had a few as cover for partridges she was breeding, also a good nesting site for some small birds. Just racking my brains trying to think back about 15 years for the name. David @ the wet end of Swansea Bay The typical flowering honeysuckles shed their leaves; nitida is pure foliage and *evergreen. Pilata is semi evergreen but wouldn't reach a metre high. I have a youthful hedge of nitida fertilis and several Baggesen's Gold dotted around - it is the latter variety of which I chop one to ground every few years. Another Gold had the chop treatment for the first time in the autumn and is already starting to grow and leaf up again. Cheers, Jake ======================================= Urgling happily from the dryer end of Swansea Bay.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I think it's Lonicera syringantha, several of the pictures on google show rounded leaves but this french site shows it as I had it. http://www.detenteaujardin.com/t438-...ra-syringantha David |
#6
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Pruning of mystery bush
On Sat, 14 Jan 2012 08:22:33 -0800 (PST), Dave Hill
wrote: I think it's Lonicera syringantha, several of the pictures on google show rounded leaves but this french site shows it as I had it. http://www.detenteaujardin.com/t438-...ra-syringantha David Actually, given the odd winter we've had it's very possible that a deciduous bush will keep leaves. I've been discounting something that I can see with my own eyes if I look out of the window here, even after a heavy frost last night! I was having difficulty with the leaf shape as some in the two photos look pointed and others rounded. So a question to the OP - does it flower and, if so, when and what colour? Even better if you happen to have a photo of it flowering that you can post. Cheers, Jake ======================================= Urgling happily from the dryer end of Swansea Bay. |
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