Katie's Garden Plant Centre
  • Home
    • News >
      • The Flourishing Garden
      • Bee Cafe Planters
      • Chelsea Blog
    • Christmas and winter
    • Sign up
    • Shops and shows
    • Contact us
  • Visit
    • Garden area >
      • The Garden Flower Beds
  • Shop online
    • Delivery information
  • Our Plants
    • Bedding and Annuals >
      • Hanging Baskets
    • Perennials
    • Shrubs >
      • Conifers
    • Bulbs
    • Trees
    • Hedging
    • Fruit & Veg
    • Roses >
      • Rose pruning
    • Shade plants >
      • Ferns
    • Herbs
    • Lavenders
    • Alpines
    • Grasses
    • Climbers >
      • Clematis pruning
  • Flourish
    • Flourish flashback
    • Flourish terms conditions
  • About
    • Gallery
    • Trade services
    • Garden services
    • Garden design
    • Nursery production
    • Environment
    • History
  • Advice
    • Garden tips
    • Planting Themes
    • Videos
    • Slug proof
    • Rabbit proof
    • Deer proof
    • Plants for shade
    • North-facing walls
    • Dry & sandy soil
    • Coastal sites
    • Exposed sites
    • Clay soil
    • Damp soil
    • Plants for slopes
    • Plants for pots
    • Evergreen perennials
    • Long flowering perennials
    • Plants for ground cover
    • Flowers for cutting
    • Plants for butterflies
    • Plants for birds
    • Plants for predatory insects
    • Plants for Pollinators
  • Home
    • News >
      • The Flourishing Garden
      • Bee Cafe Planters
      • Chelsea Blog
    • Christmas and winter
    • Sign up
    • Shops and shows
    • Contact us
  • Visit
    • Garden area >
      • The Garden Flower Beds
  • Shop online
    • Delivery information
  • Our Plants
    • Bedding and Annuals >
      • Hanging Baskets
    • Perennials
    • Shrubs >
      • Conifers
    • Bulbs
    • Trees
    • Hedging
    • Fruit & Veg
    • Roses >
      • Rose pruning
    • Shade plants >
      • Ferns
    • Herbs
    • Lavenders
    • Alpines
    • Grasses
    • Climbers >
      • Clematis pruning
  • Flourish
    • Flourish flashback
    • Flourish terms conditions
  • About
    • Gallery
    • Trade services
    • Garden services
    • Garden design
    • Nursery production
    • Environment
    • History
  • Advice
    • Garden tips
    • Planting Themes
    • Videos
    • Slug proof
    • Rabbit proof
    • Deer proof
    • Plants for shade
    • North-facing walls
    • Dry & sandy soil
    • Coastal sites
    • Exposed sites
    • Clay soil
    • Damp soil
    • Plants for slopes
    • Plants for pots
    • Evergreen perennials
    • Long flowering perennials
    • Plants for ground cover
    • Flowers for cutting
    • Plants for butterflies
    • Plants for birds
    • Plants for predatory insects
    • Plants for Pollinators

Gardening tips

The autumn garden cut-back

23/10/2024

1 Comment

 
To prune or not to prune? That is the question for autumn.

When it comes to perennials – the flowering border plants that come back year after year – there is no “right” answer.

Those that finish flowering in spring and summer are best cut back straight away as it often encourages regrowth and fresh blooms, and you don’t want grotty brown plants detracting from autumn displays!

Picture

But if they are running out of steam in autumn then they are very unlikely to do anything appealing again until next year.

So the best thing is to cut them right back? Well, it’s six of one and half-a-dozen of the other as to whether you cut in late autumn or early spring.

If you leave the old growth in place till spring then you are leaving habitat for wildlife to shelter in through the winter, anything from hedgehogs to beneficial insects. On the downside … you are leaving habitat for wildlife, anything from rodents to troublesome bugs and slugs.

(Consensus these days is to help all wildlife for a balanced ecosystem in the garden and the hopes the ‘good’ creatures eat the ‘bad’ ones!)
Picture
Picture


If you leave the old growth it can protect the plant’s root system from the worst of the snows and frosts, helping it to survive the winter. But if the plant had any sort of fungal disease, leaving the old growth will increase the chance of reinfection. And if the plant is turning to mush from winter wet, leaving the old growth will increase the chance of the rot reaching the roots.

Tall plants can get snapped, broken or even blown over in winter winds, which can harm the root system, and looks messy too. However, there are a number that have seedheads that birds can feed on through the lean winter months.

Verbena bonariensis is a good example of a plant that feeds the birds if you leave it, gives you free plants from self-seeding, but can suffer in the wind if not cut. So when it comes to taller plants, what you decide to do comes down to personal preference, the size/shape/sturdiness of the plant and to how sheltered a position it is growing in.


For other plants with bird-friendly seedheads click here.

Picture
Picture
Most perennials can get cut back hard to just a few inches, whether you decide to do it in autumn or spring.

Exceptions are the evergreen perennials – click here – and those that have a woody framework, which should usually only get a tidy-up.

The main cause of gardeners losing their (evergreen) Penstemon over winter is from over-enthusiastic pruning: taller plants will want the old flowering stems trimmed off to reduce problems in the wind, but the bulk of the plant should be left throughout the frosty season to protect the heart and root system of the plant.
Picture
Picture
Woody-stemmed Salvias such as ‘Hot Lips’ should get similar treatment, with only around the top half of growth cut down.

But if it’s a plant that regrows from the ground and doesn’t keep its leaves year-round you are likely safe to cut back hard.

If you decide to wait till spring it is a good idea to check up on your plants through the winter to make sure there isn't anything damaged, diseased or rotting that needs clearing away.

Picture
With Lavenders there are also arguments for and against trimming in either autumn or spring. But if left uncut they soon go straggly and bare at the base so they should definitely be done one time or the other each year! Cut about 1-2 inches below flowering stems.


Evergreen herbs such as sage, thyme and rosemary should also just get light trims to prevent them going 'leggy', preferably several times a year. Most other herbs, including mints, tarragon, parsley and marjoram can be cut hard in either autumn or spring, subject to the same considerations as perennials.


Most alpines are evergreen which means they should get no more than a trim. The majority are also spring flowerers and are best cut after flowering time. If you wait till spring you run the risk of new flowers being 'lost' amongst scruffy old growth.



Ornamental grasses often have seedheads for the birds, and can also look attractive in the winter frosts,  and this old growth should be left to protect the heart of the plant until spring.
 

The main pruning time for Roses is February/March when new shoots start to appear on the stems - click here for tips. If it’s not a variety that produces rosehips for winter there is no harm in giving it a tidy-up trim now if it is bothering you in some way.
 

Almost all shrubs are best pruned immediately after flowering time, if they need pruning at all. The main exceptions are those that will form fruits or berries after flowering – click here and here for examples.


So if you haven’t done your summer-flowering shrubs already, get out there!
Picture
Picture
Picture
For all plants, but particularly shrubs, which will generally have thicker stems, avoid any pruning when frost is forecast as it can cause damage to open wounds which can then spread into the rest of the plant.
1 Comment

    About

    Tips by Catherine McMillan, author of Gardening for the Uncommitted.

    Buy now on our online shop and on Amazon.co.uk

    Video tutorials on our Videos page!

    See more video tutorials on our YouTube channel.

    Archives

    April 2025
    January 2025
    October 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    March 2024

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Keep in touch with Katie's Garden!


Hours

Every day: 10am - 4pm

Telephone

01473 736717

Email

info@katiesgarden.co.uk

Newsletters

Sign up here

Rewards club

Sign up to Flourish here