How to Deadhead Spent Flowers From Your Plants For Longer Bloom Times

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How to Deadhead Spent Flowers From Your Plants For Longer Bloom Times

Your annuals and perennials will bloom more if you snip away spent flowers. Plus, it’s an easy way to help your garden look tidy.

Let’s face it: Even the name of this task sounds scary. But deadheading your plants isn’t as morbid as it sounds; it just means trimming off spent flowers. Not only does this help keep your garden looking tidy, but it also encourages your plants to continue making new flowers instead of spending energy on producing seeds.

Some gardeners get a little nervous about snipping parts off their plants, but unless you start whacking away, it’s tough to damage or kill a plant just by clipping spent flowers. So when your flowering plants have fading blooms, brown, curled up, or otherwise looking unattractive, that’s your cue to pull out your garden shears and start deadheading.

Which Plants to Deadhead?

How to Deadhead Spent Flowers From Your Plants For Longer Bloom Times

You can often get a clue about which plants to deadhead and which to leave alone just by watching them. If the flowers stay on the plant and become brown and unattractive, feel free to start trimming spent flowers to clean up the mess.

Plants with Many Small Flowers

These include Coreopsis, feverfew, golden margueritesLobeliasweet alyssum, smaller mumsPotentillaflaxAsterGaillardia, and Ageratum. Trimming one flower at a time would be too time-consuming, so instead, use grass shears ($28, The Home Depot) to tackle the task in sections. Get as much of the flower stalk as possible. Avoid buds, but don’t worry about taking a little foliage off with the spent flowers; it’ll grow back.

Shrubby Plants with Large Flowers

How to Deadhead Spent Flowers From Your Plants For Longer Bloom Times

These include large marigolds, summer phloxAstilbepeonies, purple coneflowersblack-eyed Susansdaisies, annual and perennial Salviapetunias, and zinnias. With pruning shears ($42, The Home Depot), also known as secateurs or pruning snips, cut off each spent flower individually, getting enough of the stalk, so it doesn’t stick out awkwardly. It’s OK (and in the case of leggy plants, such as petunias, desirable) to take off a bit of the foliage, too.

Roses

How to Deadhead Spent Flowers From Your Plants For Longer Bloom Times

Not to be confused with pruning, deadheading roses means taking out only the minimum amount of stem to remove the spent flower. Cut at a 45-degree angle sloping down toward the center of the rosebush. You should cut on a spot after the first pair of leaves and directly above an outward-facing stem (a stem that points away from the plant’s center).

Long-stem Flowers on Tall Stalks

These include daylilieslarkspurfoxgloveshostastulipsdaffodils, Oriental poppiespeonies, and irises. Simply cut back each spent flower with hand pruning shears as close as possible to the spot where the stalk meets the leaves.

No Need to Deadhead

Though many plants will benefit from deadheading, not all need it to bloom. You can also find self-cleaning varieties of some plants that traditionally need deadheading; the spent flowers will naturally fall off, and the plant will produce more flowers without any trimming from you.

Other Ways to Extend Blooms

How to Deadhead Spent Flowers From Your Plants For Longer Bloom Times

Deadheading is just one way to stretch the bloom season; there are other tricks you can use to make color last.

foxany
Author: foxany

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