Boxwood pruning in summer, how to cut back a big boxwood summer vs winter

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  • Опубликовано: 26 июн 2021
  • follow up video, the shrubs a year later!: • pruned boxwood a year ...
    how to prune a big boxwood shrub, pruning it back a lot.
    jak przycinać duży krzew bukszpanu, często go przycinając.
    cómo podar un gran arbusto de boj, podarlo mucho.
    wie man einen großen Buchsbaumstrauch beschneidet und ihn stark zurückschneidet.
    comment tailler un gros arbuste de buis, en le taillant beaucoup.
    как обрезать большой куст самшита, сильно его обрезая
    hoe een grote buxusstruik snoeien, veel terugsnoeien.
    come potare un grande arbusto di bosso, potandolo molto

Комментарии • 189

  • @maureenmckenna5220
    @maureenmckenna5220 Год назад +37

    Thanks so much for showing a pruning job that usually scares people. I have cut back much smaller shrubs, to keep them in line with the foundation as they were originally planted, instead of allowing them to cover the foundation completely. They look very bare after pruning, but every one of them came back beautifully. Early spring or late winter works best and by the beginning of summer you can see big growth, and by the end of summer you are usually sorry you didn’t cut more. The problem for me is the debris that is left over after pruning. There is a lot of it, and bagging it and taking it to the landfill is no easy task.

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад

      we made a follow up video on what it looks like a year later

  • @TheCreedBratton
    @TheCreedBratton Месяц назад +8

    Thank you for giving me the confidence to drastically prune my overgrown boxwoods!

    • @emilyhunt2129
      @emilyhunt2129 Месяц назад

      Just asking I too am going to cut back 7 very large boxwoods in my garden this month.
      Are you going to fertilize and if so, what type of fertilizer?

  • @annie3410
    @annie3410 6 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you so much for this! I was worried I would harm my overgrown boxwoods. I’m looking forward to a relaxing workout in my front garden this March! 🌱🌿

  • @mdleweight
    @mdleweight Год назад +37

    I did not know Rudy Guliani pruned shrubs too!

    • @olesam8970
      @olesam8970 Год назад +9

      What an insult

    • @Mtcwooly
      @Mtcwooly 10 месяцев назад +2

      Lol, so accurate

    • @HineyPuff
      @HineyPuff 10 месяцев назад +2

      Giggles

    • @strada5052
      @strada5052 10 месяцев назад +15

      Of course he does! I recall Rudy’s Press Conference at Four Seasons Landscaping.

    • @ccmjj9770
      @ccmjj9770 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@strada5052LMAO

  • @martinwarner1178
    @martinwarner1178 7 месяцев назад +5

    I like this fellow, he's no slouch, or pansy, NO GLOVES! If he was in England, I would drink beer with him, any time. Thank you Captain, and peace be unto you.

  • @ashwednesday8497
    @ashwednesday8497 2 года назад +33

    I did this to a 25 year old boxwood hedge (20 bushes) that was overgrown and woody inside. It took me three weeks during our mild Southern California winter. Now in mid March, there is a lot of new growth coming in fast! I wanted them to recover before our desert summer heat arrives.

  • @marilynmcneely206
    @marilynmcneely206 Год назад +4

    Love hearing the birds,,,🕊🕊🕊

  • @cmsbeth
    @cmsbeth Год назад +14

    Oh wow. I had NO idea I could cut boxwoods back that far! I actually dug several up and planted new ones. Now, I know.

  • @Reblwitoutacause
    @Reblwitoutacause 25 дней назад

    This extreme cutting is exactly how bonsai works. Good stuff

  • @alyssasexton7952
    @alyssasexton7952 Месяц назад

    I love this video and have watched it multiple times. Hoping NY heavily pruned boxwoods come back now! 🤞

  • @jesshothersall
    @jesshothersall 2 года назад +19

    Thank you, particularly for the tip about doing a notch cut on the wrong side first, and for showing how the hard pruned bush has recovered. That was very reassuring before I start on my two overgrown box bushes. One extra tip if anyone wants a Box hedge? I normally take nearly all the cut off bits, strip the bottom, leaving just a few leaves at the top of a piece about 4 or 5 inches long, dip in hormone rooting powder, then put them a couple of inches apart in old sinks etc. They nearly all grow really well, into new box bushes ready to be a hedge later on.

  • @richarddonahue6730
    @richarddonahue6730 5 месяцев назад +1

    I think we went to the same school because i have learned the same thing. Bravo to you for showing what to do and the results of it.

  • @handlaidtrack
    @handlaidtrack 5 дней назад

    Thank you. Now to go prune mine!

  • @NewWorldOrder683
    @NewWorldOrder683 Месяц назад

    Absolutely loved the video. Thanks for the confirmation on what I felt to be true about these plants!

  • @chesterha11
    @chesterha11 Год назад +11

    OMG! Thank you thank you thank you for showing us your technique! I have boxwood that have grown up midway of my windows in the front of my house and although they are beautiful, it poses a security risk not being able to see outside. I started pruning them back with electric shears to a better height, and shaping them in the front, but they looked horrible afterwards. I though I was gonna be stuck with having to uproot them. Thanks for sharing that I can shear harder on them to get them under the windows!

  • @fortheearth
    @fortheearth 2 года назад +12

    Great demonstration and instructions. Thank you!

  • @larrycj4382
    @larrycj4382 Год назад +3

    Thanks for the guidance! We have 2 overgrown boxwoods in our front garden that are getting trimmed pronto! 😸

  • @NancyDrew1
    @NancyDrew1 10 месяцев назад +2

    I’m taking my chances and doing this 😅. Thanks. I’m always fearful trimming below the green part!

  • @bobcook8576
    @bobcook8576 Год назад +4

    Excellent job. Doing this for yourself is one thing. A paying customer not so much. Remove and replace for instant gratification.

    • @pamelah6431
      @pamelah6431 10 месяцев назад

      Depends on the customer. I have several clients that are gardeners and get it.

  • @tedhillock8938
    @tedhillock8938 2 года назад +5

    Good job, excellent information 👏

  • @oNeGiAnTLiE
    @oNeGiAnTLiE Год назад +4

    Very Good ! Thank you for the lesson! 😁

  • @0dark35
    @0dark35 Год назад +2

    Well done about ready to go to town on my front landscape in nashville

  • @johnh7745
    @johnh7745 5 месяцев назад

    Pretty impressive..this is what I need to do spring 2024, also to my spruce, I have seen a beautiful spruce tree come straight up from a ground root I cut back years ago. Thank you.

  • @alyssasexton7952
    @alyssasexton7952 9 месяцев назад +2

    Can I still heavily cut back our boxwoods in September or should we wait until next year? Thanks!

  • @eibach1000
    @eibach1000 7 месяцев назад +1

    OMG! I would never ever think to cut it back that much. what kind of boxwood is this? its huge.

  • @SophieBird07
    @SophieBird07 26 дней назад

    This is great info! The thing is, I live in a townhouse community where the grounds people basically prune to round out shapes, year after year with no eye toward actual care and esthetics, or preservation of the landscaping that is nearing 40 years old.
    I did brave clipping back one boxwood next to my door pretty severely a couple years ago and it recovered really well all things considered. However a couple of other nearby boxwoods have some sort of blight or die back that is never addressed and is probably being spread throughout the entire community with each pruning session. Any advice regarding possible treatment to save those shrubs, other than my clipping out dead sections until the plants finally give up the ghost?

  • @femineity
    @femineity Год назад +1

    I have a huge old boxwood in my front lawn that's about 10 feet tall and during the winter, the snow broke open the boxwood and it now gets sun inside of it. Sadly, the only thing growing from having gotten sunlight is WEEDS! Lots and lots of weeds! I actually didn't mind that it had grown so tall seeing that it's surrounded by lawn and at the corner of my home's lot. After it broke, I figured I should have maybe somehow tied the limbs in the center together prior to the snow but because it had gone through many, MANY YEARS of harsh winters and never slit open, I didn't think it would need it! I was hoping that it would sprout and fill in but like I mentioned, all that filled in were nasty prickly weeds that grow taller than the actual boxwood if I don't go in and try and cut them down several times during the summer. THEN, I asked my lawn guy if he would trim all of my boxwoods one summer and when I came out after he'd been at it for a while, I saw that he cut the elder boxwood back hard, exposing the large limbs. I hadn't asked that he cut that particular boxwood back, just the ones in front of my home but it was too late! I actually didn't think before seeing THIS video that you could even cut back an old boxwood hard like that because I'd seen where boxwoods didn't recover and all that was left were naked limbs that never rebounded d! Well, it's been about a year now and unfortunately my old boxwood now looks terrible, with green atop and tall, and naked large limbs below with all types of weeds growing in between! So now, I'm trying to figure out a way to somehow cut back and shape it where the top limbs can be architecturally styled and then add other shorter shrubs around the base of it to make the cut back look deliberate. I've gotta do something and it's too expensive for me to replant that whole area right now so...If anyone happens to read this and has some ideas, or sites where I can see examples of this having been done, I'd greatly appreciate you sharing with me where to go get some inspiration.

  • @fortunadora443
    @fortunadora443 3 месяца назад

    Very good information. Great video. Thank you.

  • @camping_with_tywan
    @camping_with_tywan Год назад +1

    Great video!

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад

      we made a follow up video on what it looks like a year later

  • @vivianhudacek1556
    @vivianhudacek1556 Год назад +3

    Very helpful! Thanks!

  • @TheLegendofBrettMorrison
    @TheLegendofBrettMorrison 2 месяца назад +1

    Hell No.... goodluck on gettin your shape back after this Hack... shouldve just cut em down... i cant watch anymore.. haha looks like the ones i did today only they were beautiful when i got done with em today didnt have to wait 3 years

  • @BestKaylee
    @BestKaylee Год назад +1

    Thank you, great video

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад

      we made a follow up video on what it looks like a year later

  • @Funky4me21
    @Funky4me21 Месяц назад

    I did this and my hedges look like they are dead for 2nd year. I was afraid I used to much fertile and killed them. They are now starting to show some signs of coming back. Not sure if I they can be fertilized now or which fertilizer is best to use. Should they be mulched heavy? There is no mulch presently under them.

  • @parabellum2126
    @parabellum2126 11 месяцев назад +1

    Blooming heck! Id hate to see what he would have done to these plants in March.

  • @johnr5252
    @johnr5252 10 месяцев назад

    Wow. That looks great. Can’t imagine why I wouldn’t want to do this?

  • @donnacarter7781
    @donnacarter7781 2 года назад +3

    I have been wondering if l could cut them back like you did. Lots of winter kill. That's great to know. Thank you so much.

  • @clairehodge5951
    @clairehodge5951 9 месяцев назад

    It’s September in coastal South Carolina. Do you think we could do a hard prune now and still be ok? Or should we wait?

  • @garrybowman7109
    @garrybowman7109 Месяц назад

    How long does it take for boxwoods pruned around March 20th to start showing signs of coming back?

  • @Ruth1803ZigZag
    @Ruth1803ZigZag Год назад +1

    Wow, glad I saw this one. Thanks

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад

      we made a follow up video on what it looks like a year later

  • @bethgork7332
    @bethgork7332 Год назад +2

    Wow!!! Loved your video!! You made me smile from ear to ear! I just had mine cut way back. I’ll let you know if they return!

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад

      we made a follow up video on what it looks like a year later

  • @davidshuff8838
    @davidshuff8838 23 дня назад

    Thank you I was worried I cut it back too much

  • @jonboz7585
    @jonboz7585 10 месяцев назад

    It’s nearly August and 90 degrees. When should boxwoods NOT be drastically cut back?
    Thanks for your video.

  • @Mvill1
    @Mvill1 Год назад +3

    What variety of Boxwood is it? Thank you.

  • @jjjjjj6322
    @jjjjjj6322 11 месяцев назад +1

    thank you for sharing this

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад +1

      we made a follow up video on what it looks like a year later

  • @moniquemonicat
    @moniquemonicat Год назад +4

    This may work in places where things grow well and green, but if you live in the Sonoran Desert (Tucson/Phoenix), do NOT prune Boxwood in late Spring or Summer when our temps are 105-115F degrees. They will die. Here in desert our Boxwoods don't grow that tall, we use them as hedges and the tallest one I've seen is maybe around 3-4 feet tall max.

  • @gerrylandscapetrimmertv3405
    @gerrylandscapetrimmertv3405 8 месяцев назад +1

    Good job sir

  • @Mairalife0
    @Mairalife0 Год назад +1

    Good vlog ❤️

  • @SoCal_Gary
    @SoCal_Gary 2 месяца назад

    If you want to reduce the height of the plants, why do you waste time and effort pruning them high only to later cut them lower?

  • @elmerkilred159
    @elmerkilred159 11 месяцев назад +2

    Okay, it's been two years. I want to see what these boxwoods look like after all of that hard pruning!

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад +1

      i made a new video on what they look like now (a year later)

    • @robertoleksa5817
      @robertoleksa5817 8 месяцев назад

      @@gardeningtipsandmorecan I do this on a little gem boxwood or the dwarf variation that gets around 2x2. I Pruned last fall when I was doing my landscaping and got winter bite and didn’t do well this summer. Lots of bare spots

  • @loribaugh8283
    @loribaugh8283 Год назад +1

    You are awesome

  • @bobbyb1607
    @bobbyb1607 Год назад +4

    Dried Boxwood is indeed very hard. If you know any woodworkers, they might want the bigger pieces. It makes excellent chisel and screwdriver handles, its used to make small wooden planes and on certain types of larger wooden planes its inlaid in wear areas and then called a boxed plane.

  • @frandanco6289
    @frandanco6289 Год назад +14

    You just have to be ok with your yard looking like hell for awhile, I guess... :( Why not start trimming it back all the way around, so much at a time, so it does not have to look so awful??? Yes, it may take longer, but at least you wont have such a drastic looking yard to look at for a few years, right? Yes, it came back fine, I agree... But I just hate to take a plant that far down, and start it over... Yes, the best thing would to have been keeping up on trimming it back yearly, so you have more control over the size and height, but some people just don't do it or have a good enough gardener who knows how to do it...

    • @CramoisiLetoile
      @CramoisiLetoile Год назад +13

      Sometimes people don't have years to correct an overgrown hedge. We purchased a house that we knew we might have to sell in 5 years. There was a gigantic 8'x25' azalea hedge across the front of the property. It was also on a steep slope and had started to grow down and out.
      I cut the entire hedge down to about 30". We found bags full of trash and natty light cans underneath. The hedge was reduced to just branches but within a month it completely leafed out and looked furry. The next summer it had nice new normal growth but no buds. The summer after that it bloomed which was great since we had just received notice to move and the hedge had recovered to a beautiful state. No regrets.

    • @revivalservicebydesign330
      @revivalservicebydesign330 Год назад

      yes..... but it's a great technique! I don't think i can do it. if I did it for a client I'm sure they would sue me........ cool though to learn about this here.

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад

      Just made a video on what they look like now

    • @pamelah6431
      @pamelah6431 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@revivalservicebydesign330sounds like you need to work on communicating with your clients.

  • @deineadam2240
    @deineadam2240 Год назад +1

    Now I have time to tackle the 60 year old bush in my yard. So need to find a video where it's a bit slower.

  • @lucasyin5040
    @lucasyin5040 Год назад +4

    what variety this boxwood is? I always thought boxwood is slow growing. thanks

    • @thedudegrowsfood284
      @thedudegrowsfood284 Год назад +1

      2 varieties: English box and american box. American grows faster, English holds shape longer.

  • @womanofsubstance8735
    @womanofsubstance8735 Год назад +5

    It is much easier and faster if you use some twine to tightly tie the bush together a few inches above where you want to cut, then use good electric or gas hedge pruners. Shear off the top, then use hedger to shear up the sides to the size and shape you want.

    • @rileymccord3777
      @rileymccord3777 7 месяцев назад

      The size of those branches? Not too certain about that one…

  • @crazytimes9989
    @crazytimes9989 Год назад +1

    That is exactly right.

  • @nakedluck11
    @nakedluck11 Год назад +1

    I have an evergreen tree by my house I'm wanting to trim. No idea what kind it is though. Its too tall and too wide from side to side.

  • @charlesfredrick4789
    @charlesfredrick4789 Год назад +4

    The real workout begins when you got to drag off all those cuttings. You forgot to mention , that those folding pruning saws cut on the pull stroke.

    • @wilsonfineart
      @wilsonfineart Год назад +2

      A Silky Gomboy cuts both ways

    • @charlesfredrick4789
      @charlesfredrick4789 Год назад +3

      @@wilsonfineart so I guess it identified as as a bi-directional. 🥴

  • @emilyboehnlein3529
    @emilyboehnlein3529 Год назад +1

    Hi I have a few boxwoods that I need to shape. Can Shape Them any time of year and maybe if it’s in the late summer is there anything I can do like watering or feeding them to help them after shaping them? They aren’t 6 feet tall lol but they had been just shaped on the outside and not thinned so the insides have no leaves and there are bald areas

  • @asyouknowmesoiam
    @asyouknowmesoiam 11 месяцев назад

    Question. A new home here in East Texas. Its high Summer and 100°. I need to do this so badly. Is it bad to just go way down the trunk and get all that out at once? Its about 8 plants all intertwined and covering windows and up to the brickwork on the side.

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад

      check my new vidoe on what they look like a year later, yes you can skip the top pruning and start lower on the plant, but dont go too close down to the ground!

  • @kathbiddle-dutton7069
    @kathbiddle-dutton7069 2 года назад +2

    Thanks….. so if pruned now March …I’ll see new pretty green growth in 2 months … heading back today to give it another wack..

    • @chloe5susan
      @chloe5susan 11 месяцев назад +1

      So what happened??

    • @kathbiddle-dutton7069
      @kathbiddle-dutton7069 11 месяцев назад

      @@chloe5susan hi … that was a yr ago n we took it out completely..it was to large for the yard/spot , just looked out of place n the trimming was not enough .. put in 2 small fothergilla..love it. In hindsight I should have put in an evergreen..but will add sweet box in front of fothergilla eventually ..😀

  • @user-sb5sg9mz8i
    @user-sb5sg9mz8i 10 месяцев назад

    Доброго вам дня.В каком месяцк вы зделали иакую обрезку?!

  • @baldwinlbb
    @baldwinlbb 7 месяцев назад +1

    10:53 I live in Central Virginia and have several huge boxwood. I would like to severely prune these can I do this this month October or November?

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  7 месяцев назад

      better to wait till the spring, they wont regrow foliage before the winter and it wont look good througout the winter

    • @baldwinlbb
      @baldwinlbb 7 месяцев назад

      @@gardeningtipsandmore thanks so much

  • @thedyslexic9936
    @thedyslexic9936 9 месяцев назад

    when you remove taht much foliage, is tghere enough left to gather the sunlight?

  • @edwardweber6231
    @edwardweber6231 Год назад +1

    Also a hint if this home is for sale, I’m guessing there’s a underground oil tank under the boxwoods

  • @jeusgarcia8597
    @jeusgarcia8597 Год назад +2

    WEEKLY MAINTENANCE WILL SAVE YOU
    TIME/EFFORT/MONEY, BE SMART AND KEEP IT SIMPLE.

  • @stephenlflf3871
    @stephenlflf3871 Год назад +1

    Perfect example at the end

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад +1

      thanks we made a follow up video on what it looks like a year later

  • @MrUncleSpicy
    @MrUncleSpicy Год назад +3

    Can we get an update video

  • @briancody5308
    @briancody5308 10 месяцев назад

    What type of boxwood are those?

  • @Estellamed
    @Estellamed 2 года назад +4

    What variety are these boxwoods? I thought the only grow up to 5 ft.

    • @jesshothersall
      @jesshothersall 2 года назад +2

      In the UK box bushes in stately home gardens, can grow to at least 15 feet or so :)

    • @babyhuez597
      @babyhuez597 2 года назад +1

      @@jesshothersall how is that done? I’d love for mine to grow that tall for some privacy.

    • @derrickp
      @derrickp Год назад +2

      @@babyhuez597 if you have shorter ones let one of the center stems grow up more it will become more of the “trunk” that branches will grow off of. Then over years you can shape it to what you want

  • @JA-jm8bk
    @JA-jm8bk 8 месяцев назад

    Why not either move it or get rid of it & plant something that doesn't get as large? Sort of a waste of time to prune something that will grow back just as large.

  • @JorgeMartinez-wt4vs
    @JorgeMartinez-wt4vs 11 месяцев назад

    When is a good month to cut them down in Minnesota ? Midwest, it is already begening of July, I hope I had seen this earlier in the year.

  • @vashon100
    @vashon100 11 месяцев назад

    4:38 I can't imagine trimming 1000 boxwoods to be able to quote a statistic of 99.9% recovering.

  • @stargazer6753
    @stargazer6753 8 месяцев назад

    What about the 1/3 rd rule?

  • @mora118
    @mora118 Год назад +1

    I have massive box plants that I need to cut back. guess I found this at just the right time of year. I dont think I have big enough cutters tho. I do have a hand saw tho.

  • @aat3tville181
    @aat3tville181 Год назад +2

    I am about to do this. What do yours look like now a year later?

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад

      we made a follow up video on what it looks like a year later

  • @nimiacastillo9566
    @nimiacastillo9566 11 месяцев назад +1

    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @kyro8979
    @kyro8979 Год назад +2

    It’s Aug 2022. Any chance you can do an update video?

  • @davidallen4638
    @davidallen4638 Год назад +1

    That was crazy...lol...I had no idea that you can cut boxwoods to that degree and have any chance of recovery...Im inspired...😃

  • @danihu03
    @danihu03 2 года назад +2

    What is your zone please. I have some I want to prune. My husband is going to have a heart attack when I do haha. But they are to big. I’m zone 6b, southern Indiana.

    • @leorobinson5737
      @leorobinson5737 2 года назад +1

      Then don't do it.

    • @kittenkorleone2918
      @kittenkorleone2918 Год назад +3

      I have an out of control willow. It was a cute bush 6 years ago and it's become a 12 ft. monster!! I found out I could literally take it to an inch above ground level to give it new life and to give its neighbors more room to breathe. My hubby FLIPPED OUT when he saw it. I told him to relax and one month later it had tons of new buds and now it looks like the day I bought it!! So every 3 or 4 years, she'll be getting a severe prune to the ground with no fear from us! What would we do without these RUclips videos?!

  • @user-qg5nl9nk1s
    @user-qg5nl9nk1s Год назад +1

    請問那是什麼植物?

  • @barbaradawson2907
    @barbaradawson2907 2 года назад +1

    What brand of handsaw are you using?

    • @kimberlyaccurso1921
      @kimberlyaccurso1921 2 года назад +2

      I have one very similar and it’s a stihl & I love it!

  • @TopChoiceSupply
    @TopChoiceSupply Год назад +1

    That would never live in Alabama after a pruning like that. Even with heavy watering. Never.

  • @stephaniesharkey3538
    @stephaniesharkey3538 Год назад +1

    Could have made some nice topiaries?

  • @bobmanp8653
    @bobmanp8653 Год назад +1

    how about a video on what they look like now

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад

      we made a follow up video on what it looks like a year later

  • @uhotrippa
    @uhotrippa Год назад +2

    Look like american box..

  • @billyslept-oncandelaria8886
    @billyslept-oncandelaria8886 Год назад +1

    Yo! It's been a year let's see it now

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад

      we made a follow up video on what it looks like a year later

  • @beverlyinsko1073
    @beverlyinsko1073 8 месяцев назад

    Its been 2 years...where's the update?

  • @swb3248
    @swb3248 Год назад +1

    Could I do this in late summer?

  • @mslark9111
    @mslark9111 Год назад +1

    Waaahhh.

    • @gardeningtipsandmore
      @gardeningtipsandmore  11 месяцев назад

      we made a follow up video on what it looks like a year later

  • @rob8821
    @rob8821 10 месяцев назад

    Would you do the same for all arborvitae

    • @rob8821
      @rob8821 10 месяцев назад

      Ball not all

  • @puccipower
    @puccipower 2 года назад +1

    Are you from Maryland? 😂

  • @enriquefernandez6782
    @enriquefernandez6782 Год назад +2

    I would get fired if I did that kind of pruning 🙂

  • @kimberlyaccurso1921
    @kimberlyaccurso1921 2 года назад +4

    Do you have any Holly pruning videos?

  • @deineadam2240
    @deineadam2240 Год назад

    I find the farm up the road a bit but close.

  • @calbertkensill8435
    @calbertkensill8435 2 года назад +4

    The plant is like cut your fingers off does that hurt

  • @erickborling1302
    @erickborling1302 11 месяцев назад

    Do a chinese bonsai!

  • @diwu9642
    @diwu9642 10 месяцев назад

    make two in a bigger one

    • @diwu9642
      @diwu9642 10 месяцев назад

      or make a big heart shape

  • @deecross5028
    @deecross5028 Год назад +1

    Will this method work on pines? If so, what season should I start?

    • @brockreynolds870
      @brockreynolds870 Год назад +2

      NO. You cannot do this with evergreen that have needles.

    • @deecross5028
      @deecross5028 Год назад +1

      @@brockreynolds870 Then what should I do to keep the tree? Right now the side I cut YEARS ago is partially covered with ivy.

    • @ruralangwin
      @ruralangwin Год назад +2

      NOOOOO!

  • @petergregory7199
    @petergregory7199 11 месяцев назад

    I guess that’s just about the long and the short of it.