Maintenance plan

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2010 monthly plans

September

Cut back perennial plants

Before your garden springs back to life, cut the dried leaves and stems from flowering perennials plants and ornamental grasses

Time
5-10 minutes per plant
Difficulty
Easy
Expertise
Know which garden plants are perennials
Frequency
Once a year
Where
All US
Overview

Your garden is almost ready to start greening up again, so it's time to cut off the dead growth left from last year, including the following:

  • Perennial plants that bloom in late summer or fall, such as asters, chrysanthemum, obedient plant, black-eyed Susan, coneflower, joe-pye weed, goldenrod, Russian sage and tall sedums
  • Ornamental grasses that aren't evergreen
  • Perennial plants grown for their leaves, such as artemesia, purple sage and lamb's ear

Cut perennial plants back before new growth begins or very soon after.


Steps
  1. (Optional) To hold the plant together, wrap a string around the whole plant and knot it snugly.
  2. Using a sharp hand pruner, garden shears, or scissors, cut off dead leaves and stems, based on the plant's growth habit:
    • Cut to the ground perennial plants that die back to the ground each season. New growth emerges from below ground in spring.
    • Cut back woody perennial plants — those with tough, wood-like stems — to about 6 inches tall. Remove dead leaves and small, flexible stems, but leave the woody base of the plant intact. New growth emerges from the woody stems.
    • For perennial plants with a low-growing, evergreen rosette of leaves at the base, cut off the stems but leave the rosette.
    • For perennial plants that are partially evergreen in milder climates, remove damaged leaves and remaining flowers. Examples include coral bells, bergenia and evergreen ferns.
  3. Either compost disease-free leaves and stems, or dispose of them in your town's yard waste collection. Put diseased leaves and stems in the trash.
Tips & warnings
  • In early summer, give fall-flowering perennial plants such as mums and asters another light pruning to encourage more branching and flowering. When they reach 6 to 8 inches tall, trim off the top 2 to 3 inches.
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  • Materials needed

    • (Optional) String or twine
  • Tools and equipment

    • Hand pruners, garden shears or heavy scissors
    • Garden gloves
    • (Optional) Garden cart

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