How to Cut Back Your Clematis
- 1). Identify these clematis when their blossoms open early in the spring, during April or May. Spring-blooming clematis produces flower buds in the fall, which survive over the winter, so pruning after bud formation in the winter or early spring will destroy the buds and result in no flowers.
- 2). Trim away any shoots that bloomed this season after the plant finishes blooming. Do not prune spring-blooming clematis after July in order to give the plant time to recover before forming the next season's buds.
- 3). Trim back vines to control the shape and size of the plant. Select smaller, softer growth and avoid thick, woody vines.
- 4). Water, fertilize and mulch the plant after pruning.
- 1). Identify these clematis when they blossom in mid-June. Like early-blooming clematis, they form flowers on the previous season's growth, then produce a second round of blossoms later in the summer on new growth.
- 2). Remove dead or weakened shoots in late winter or early spring. Keep the shoots with the largest and strongest-looking buds.
- 3). Deadhead spent blossoms to encourage a second round of flowering. Alternately, you can cut the entire plant back to 12 to 18 inches. The second flowers will be smaller and appear in late summer.
- 4). Water, fertilize and mulch the clematis after pruning.
- 1). Identify late-blooming clematis when they begin blooming in mid-June and continue flowering into the fall. Late-blooming clematis produce blossoms on the current season's growth, making them the easiest type to prune.
- 2). Cut the entire plant back to 24 to 36 inches in height in early spring, removing all dead growth. Some late-blooming cultivars will add eight feet of new growth in a single season.
- 3). Water, fertilize and mulch the plant after pruning.
Spring-Blooming Clematis
Large-Flower Clematis
Late-Blooming Clematis
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