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Focus on Flowers
Lavender
The much loved lavender plant is categorized as a subshrub. It
has a woody base like a shrub, but also soft top growth like herbaceous
perennials. So lavender does not go completely dormant in the winter,
it only rests. This enables it to produce the top growth more quickly
as the weather warms up. It also makes it susceptible to problems
when it is grown in areas where there is frequent freezing and thawing.
We need to wait for summer before we prune our lavenders. Be sure
that you can see the new growth and therefore distinguish the live
from the dead wood. Then it is safe to remove dead flowers and stems
and shape the plant. Remember never to cut lavender completely to
the ground. I used to cut mine down in the fall and the results
were disastrous. Other subshrubs that don't benefit from either
fall or early pruning are Russian Sage, and culinary herbs such
as Oregano, Marjoram, Sage, and Thyme. Never prune these lower than
four or five leaf nodes above the soil. As well as judicious well-timed
pruning, lavender needs full sun and really good drainage, so likes
slopes or raised beds best. A native of the Mediterranean region,
it resists settling into Midwestern gardens unless we pamper it
a bit.
This is Moya Andrews, and today we focused on Lavender.
WFIU
Created and maintained by Michael
Toler
Last updated:
Thursday, June 9, 2005
Copyright 2005, The Trustees of
Indiana
University
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