1. Deadheaded the butterfly bush.
The butterfly bush is huge; the tallest I've ever seen at 8-10 feet. My Garden To-Do list told me that I was supposed to cut it back in the Spring and so I did--part of it. I was curious though, would cutting it back make that big of a difference for bloom?, so I left some of the tallest branchest alone. The result--I don't see a difference in the amount of bloom between those I cut back and those I didn't. One obvious benefit is that the shrub isn't as leggy and that it's easier to deadhead the lower branches. The dead flowers look much uglier to me on the white flowered variety than they did on the purple one at the old house so I tend to deadhead this one a little more; perhaps I should cut it back more severely next Spring.
2. Weeded the front bed.
Oh, the dreaded front bed and its weeds. In one sense I find weeding soothing, however a person can only weed a bed so many times...The biggest culprit this summer has been liriope. Not the variety I moved to the front, but some that was removed from the bed before we bought the house yet keeps reappearing. Those insiduous weeds with the thorn were back too, in multiple locations which led to my next small project...
3. Cut back the insiduous weeds from the front and small tree volunteers in all established beds and painted on Weed B Gone
The small trees came with the gardens, mostly small oaks. I had cut them back previously, hoping that would take care of it, but no such luck. Their close proximity to the plants I want to keep in the bed made it risky; hopefully the basting brush I used did the trick without damaging anything else. A couple of the beds look much more open now that I did this little piece of housekeeping.
Oh, the shrubs in the front. You can see that they've already started stretching in front of the windows again (and almost to the roof of the garage) despite being pruned this Spring. They are just too big for the area and should never have been planted where they are! This is a prime example of why one should always consider the ultimate size of a plant before putting it anywhere. I will prune them again this year and probably several more, but I truly feel I am only delaying the inevitable. Why not just go ahead and get rid of them now? Besides having hope that maybe I can figure out a way to severely prune them without killing them thus minimizing having to do this twice a year, just look at this trunk. They were probably planted when the house was
built in 1978, making them almost 30 years old. How can I contemplate anything, but a lifetime of pruning them?
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