Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Pruning as art

I'm well into the March pruning season now - have so far tackled dogwoods, coppiced eucalyptus, hebes, mahonias, hydrangeas, buddlejas and an overgrown berberis (that one was as truly horrible a job as it gets). I have yet to take the secateurs to a deciduous ceanothus or two, a cotinus, a small field of hypericum, and several pyracantha. I'm sure I'll spot a few more before I'm done.

It took me quite a while to realise that pruning is an art form (and I'm not talking about the really arty stuff like cloud pruning or topiary - just common or garden keeping your shrubs in check pruning). One injudicious snip and the balance of a shrub is ruined - usually if you chop off a branch you weren't intending to you actually end up starting again, as you then have to re-balance the shrub to make amends for your mistake.

So when I'm pruning I take my time. I do an awful lot of standing back and pondering with my head on one side, à la van Gogh (told you it was an art form). This is because once you prune out one big-ish branch, if you take a step back and look at the whole shrub, it suddenly becomes glaringly obvious which branch is now sticking out like a sore thumb and needs to be pruned out as well. Eventually - hopefully - you get to an equilibrium, where all the branches are evenly spaced, there's plenty of air and light in the centre of the shrub, it's not too tall or too wide, and looks just right (if considerably slimmer than when you started).

Of course there are shrubs which provide a little light relief to all this nailbiting judgement malarky - cornus, buddleja and coppiced eucalyptus you can just gaily slash back to a bud somewhere between 6" - 36" above ground level with no thought to aesthetic delicacies. But treat all shrubs with such reckless abandon - as, I find, most white van gardeners do - and you end up with a stubby stump of brushwood which does no aesthetic favours to anyone and won't help the health of the shrub, either. Take three, or even four times as long over doing it, and you'll have not a pruned shrub, but a work of art. It's a creative business, this gardening lark.

3 comments:

Melanie Chopay said...

Thanks for the reminder, I have to add pruning to the list of spring clean-up that's already longer than my arm. I'd better get out there this weekend!

Sisah said...

What is a "white van gardener" ? I wonder if you would put me into that category? I agree with you, pruning is an art and I admire all these experienced people who know all about it!There are quite a few books in my book-shelves but reading all these facts and rules look good in theory but I am never sure how it will work in practice.
That sounds like a lot of work you have been doing, I am glad my garden is only small and there are not that many shrubs. But I have quite a few of wild roses and ramblers which have to be tamed!

The Constant Gardener said...

Ah don't start me on white van gardeners... they're the blokes who travel around in white vans pruning people's gardens into a series of blobs with high-powered gardening tools. They bludgeon the garden into submission in as short a time as possible, then jump back in their vans and go on to the next one. They're very cheap (which is why they get more work than I do :D) but there's not an artistic bone in their bodies. I know I'm being rude, but they have about as much to do with gardening as a cement mixer.

I'll now stand back and await the flaming from real gardeners who happen to drive white vans...

Related Posts with Thumbnails