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  • Marjorie Peronto: My name is Marjorie Peronto and I'm with the University of Maine Cooperative

  • Extension. Today we're going to learn how to prune a lilac.

  • It's important to prune your lilac yearly to keep it healthy and flowering profusely.

  • If you leave a lilac neglected for several years it becomes very congested in the center,

  • which makes it more subject to diseases and it also becomes too tall so that the blossoms

  • are way above your head and harder for you to enjoy.

  • So, in pruning our lilac today we have three objectives. One, we want to keep the shrub

  • open so that sunlight and air can circulate into the center of the shrub. Two, we want

  • to stimulate growth of young, vigorous shoots. Those will be the ones that will bear lots

  • of flowers in the future. Three, we want to keep the shrub at a reasonable height.

  • It's easiest to prune a lilac and any other deciduous tree or shrub -- that is, those

  • that drop their leaves in the winter -- in the late winter or early spring. That would

  • be in March in Maine. The reason for this is, it's not actively growing and there are

  • no leaves on the plant to block our view, so we can really see what we're doing.

  • The disadvantage to this is that the flower buds for this year have already formed. They

  • formed last year. When I remove wood from this shrub now, I'm also decreasing this coming

  • spring's flower display. So, the other option is waiting until it flowers and going in immediately

  • after the flowers fade and doing your pruning, but for demonstration purposes we're doing

  • it without the leaves so you can really see what's going on.

  • So, there's three tools that you need when you're pruning a lilac that's been allowed

  • to get as large as this one. The first one is a pruning saw and a seven inch blade is

  • plenty to get into tight corners. I really like the folding saws because, when you're

  • done, you can just stick it in your pocket and keep it clean.

  • The second is a pair of loppers. These loppers are made to cut branches between an inch and

  • an inch and a half thick. OK? The saw is for larger cuts. Then the third is a pair of hand

  • pruners and these are made for pruning pencil-sized branches or smaller. OK? So, you're fully

  • equipped if you have those three.

  • Make sure you keep your tools sharp so that you get nice, clean cuts. If your tools are

  • dull, you will tear or shred or crush the branches, leaving uneven wounds that take

  • a lot longer to heal.

  • There's a couple of approaches we can take when pruning a lilac if it's old and it's

  • been left neglected for a number of years and it's a tangled mess of stems with very

  • few flowers. You might want to cut the whole thing down to within a foot of the ground.

  • That will stimulate it to send up new shoots but it won't start to flower for several years

  • and it won't look very good. So, it will go through an ugly phase.

  • A less dramatic approach is to do this to renovate the shrub over time, taking a little

  • bit out over a period of several years, which is what I'm going to demonstrate today. Now,

  • I've already gone in and removed a few branches beforehand for the purpose of this demonstration,

  • so we can more clearly see what we're looking for.

  • So, the first thing to look for are the oldest, thickest stems in the shrub. You want to find

  • those and remove up to one third of them. This will do two things. It will open up the

  • center of the shrub and it will also bring the height of the shrub down, because the

  • oldest stems also tend to be the tallest. You want to remove them as close to the ground

  • as possible.

  • You may need to take them out in stages, to avoid wounding other branches in the shrub.

  • The bark on young lilac shoots is very thin and fragile, so it's very easy to create wounds,

  • so we want to be careful and make very precise cuts.

  • The second thing to look for after you've removed a few of the oldest, thickest stems,

  • is what is called the three Ds. That's dead, damaged and diseased wood.

  • Dead wood is brittle and has no plumb buds on it. It's easy to see and that should come

  • out at any time. Damaged and diseased wood should be cut back to healthy wood or removed

  • entirely.

  • The third thing to look for is crossing, rubbing branches. When two branches are crossing and

  • rubbing, as they grow they get thicker and thicker and they create a wound there, at

  • that surface, which is an entry place for disease organisms. So, we want to alleviate

  • that problem.

  • Then we look for any drooping branches that are hanging down too low and cut those off

  • to a healthy side shoot. Lastly we take out pencil-thin suckers that are coming up from

  • the base or twiggy growth that is cluttering the base of the plant and then if there's

  • anything that's growing outside the boundaries of the plant, where you want it to grow, that

  • should be removed as well.

  • Most or all of the cuts that you make on your lilac are thinning cuts. Those are cuts where

  • you remove an entire branch or an entire stem at its point of origin to open up that plant.

  • Here we have the finished product for this year. We have removed a lot of large stems

  • from the center, I've taken out some crossing rubbing branches, a lot of the dead wood...

  • All the dead wood I could find, drooping branches, little spindly things coming up from the bottom

  • and what is left behind are some nice, young shoots with nice, fat flower buds. Those will

  • grow into larger stems that will continue to produce flowers for a number of years.

  • I still have some taller shoots, although I did reduce the height quite a bit. These

  • taller ones will probably come out next year. I just didn't want to take it all out at once

  • so that the shrub still looks intact. As you can see the center is wide open, we'll have

  • good air circulation in there, good sun penetration and we still have a lot of flower buds left

  • to give us a lovely display this year.

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