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			 Boost 
			the Beauty of Spring Flowering Shrubs By Melinda Myers
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            [June 28, 2022]  
             Bring your overgrown lilacs, forsythia, mock 
			orange, pieris and other spring flowering shrubs down to size while 
			maintaining their natural beauty and spring floral display. | 
        
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			 Prune spring blooming shrubs right after flowering 
			for maximum flowering. These shrubs set their flower buds in summer 
			so pruning at other times of the year reduces or eliminates the 
			spring floral display. Major pruning on these shrubs can also be 
			done in late winter. It’s easier to see what needs cutting and the 
			plants respond well to pruning at this time of the year. You’ll just 
			eliminate some of the spring flowers. 
 Summer blooming shrubs like potentilla, beautyberry, and 
			Annabelle-type hydrangeas flower on new growth. Prune these, when 
			needed, in late winter or early spring before growth begins or 
			anytime during the dormant season.
 
 Make sure you have the proper tools and safety equipment before 
			making the first cut. Protect your eyes and hands with safety 
			glasses and gloves. Then make sure your pruning tools are clean and 
			sharp. Using the right pruning tool for the job helps ease muscle 
			strain and fatigue while making proper cuts that close quickly. This 
			will reduce the risk of insects and diseases moving into the plant.
 
 Use bypass pruners to cut small stems that are 1/2-inch diameter or 
			less. These have two sharp blades, like scissors, and make clean 
			cuts that close quickly. Employ a bypass lopper like Corona® Tools’ 
			ClassicCUT® SL15167 with soft grips that fit well and will cut limbs 
			up to 1 ¾” in diameter. Loppers have long handles that give you 
			greater leverage and extend your reach.
 
 
			 
			
			You will need a pruning saw when doing renewal pruning. A 
			short-bladed saw makes it easier to access and cut larger stems to 
			ground level. Look for a saw, like the RazorTOOTH Saw® RS16150, with 
			a pull stroke cutting action and ergonomic handle. It makes fast and 
			easy cuts and minimizes hand fatigue.
 
 Once you have your tools, you are ready to start pruning. Reduce the 
			height and leggy growth on overgrown suckering shrubs over the next 
			three years. This type of renewal pruning is better for the plant 
			and most gardeners find it less stressful for them as well.
 
			Remove one third of the largest and oldest stems to 
			ground level each year for three years with renewal pruning. If your 
			shrub has twelve stems, you will prune four of these back to the 
			ground this year, four more the following year, and remove the last 
			four older stems the third year.  
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            By the end of the three years, you have a smaller 
			shrub with leafy stems from ground to tip and flowers at a level you 
			can enjoy.
 Start by removing any crossed or dead branches. Disinfect tools with 
			a 70% alcohol or disinfectant spray between cuts, if you suspect the 
			plant is suffering from disease. This will help reduce the risk of 
			spreading the disease throughout the plant.
 
 You can stop pruning at this point and continue renewal pruning next 
			year in late winter. If you decide to continue, remove a few more of 
			the older stems to ground level. Taking these stems back to the 
			ground encourages new growth at the base of the plant.
 
 Minimize additional pruning at this point. You can reduce the height 
			on any wayward branches as needed. Make your cut on a slight angle 
			above an outward facing bud or stem. This encourages growth away 
			from the center of the plant, reducing the risk of crossing branches 
			in the future.
 
 Maintain the size and prevent leggy growth with regular pruning in 
			the future. Just remove a few older stems to ground level every year 
			or two. Investing a bit of pruning throughout the life of your 
			plants helps boost their heath, beauty, and your enjoyment.
 
 Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including 
			the recently released Midwest Gardener’s Handbook, 2nd Edition and 
			Small Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses “How to Grow 
			Anything” DVD series and the nationally-syndicated Melinda’s Garden 
			Moment TV & radio program. Myers is a columnist and contributing 
			editor for Birds & Blooms magazine and was commissioned by Corona 
			Tools for her expertise to write this article. Myers’ web site is 
			www.MelindaMyers.com.
 
            [Photo credit: Corona Tools] 
            
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