- Tips For Choosing A Lanscape Contractor
- Choosing A Landscape Contrator
- Getting Started
- Choosing The Right Plants
- Fertilizer Basics
- The Natural Look
- Shredded Bark Mulch
- Top 5 Shurb Choices
- Pruning Shrubs
- Low Mainenace Plants
- Early Signs of Spring
- Perennials Are Staples For Gardeners
- Fall Is Best Time To Plant
- Fall Pruning
- Recommended Gardening Books
- Winter Is Concrete Season
- Hard Landscape Features
- Diagnosing Grass Problems
- Is It Dead Or Alive
- Twine & Mites
The Natural Look
Trim for Natural Looking Landscape
by Mike Dooley
Ever since the lowly boxwood came on the horticultural market, well-meaning homeowners have fallen in love with the shape of the box and the ball.
The shape of the ball rarely occurs in natural shrubs, and the box shape just doesn’t exist. So why do we use these shapes when pruning our shrubs? Freud probably has an answer but I don’t.
If you want to lower your maintenance and have a “natural” looking landscape, let me suggest that you only trim spring blooming shrubs once per year in the fall. Trim fall blooming shrubs in spring.
When you do the annual trim job make sure that you trim heavily enough to last the year. The following is a list of common plants and the proper shapes to use as a guideline.
DOME SHAPED (wider at bottom)
Upright Rosemary
Potentilla
Blue Mist Spirea
Indian Hawthorn
Abelia
Crimson Barberry
Eleagnus
Grey and Parney Cotoneaster
Fern Bush
Turpentine Bush
Russian Sage
VASE SHAPED (remove lower foliage)
Crape Myrtle
Rose of Sharon
Vitex
Hawthorn Trees
Desert Willow
Butterfly Bush
Most fruit trees
LOLLYPOP SHAPED (Do not cut the top out of these trees!)
Ash
Cottonwood
Sycamore
Purple Plum
Flowering Pear
Now comes the argument: Trim the following plants as little as possible. The reason is simple. I want you to pick plants that fit the space that you put them in and you want them to look natural! When you start trimming these plants into the box shape, you take a natural plant and make it high maintenance and formal.
Juniper
Photinia
P.S. Don’t trim boxwood into a “box,” either.
Happy Gardening!