Skip to main content

Pruning 101: 5 pruning blunders to avoid this spring

When spring rolls around, gardeners and homeowners across the United States start revving up their mowers, getting out their gardening gloves, and prepping their gardens for the growing season. Some of them even pull out some pruning shears and get to work cutting and chopping their plants. But, before you get to cutting, let’s first talk about the pruning mistakes to avoid. 

Teens pruning plants

Why is pruning important?

It’s essential to get into the habit of pruning your plants regularly. Pruning is healthy for the plants in many ways. When done correctly, it encourages newer and healthier growth. This cutting back makes them stronger and sturdier, as well. For instance, plants with lopsided growth are at risk of falling over or breaking off. Maintaining your plants with pruning can also prevent diseases and pests from spreading and killing the plants or those around them.

Recommended Videos

If you’re looking to tame the wild, pruning can help keep your plants in check and sharpen the look of your landscaping. You might think that pruning is unnatural and that plants are better off left alone, like in nature. However, pruning happens naturally in the wild by animals, insects, and weather. But when we grow these lovely plants in our garden, we protect them from those natural events, so we have to prune them.

Some plants that may need pruning in your garden this spring are:

1. Pruning without purpose

Most things in life have better results when you plan them out first. The same goes for pruning! Before you get to chopping off random stems and branches, you should first think about the purpose of the pruning. It would be best if you went into a pruning project with an idea of what you’re trying to achieve. For example, yearly maintenance, reshaping the plant, or cutting off dead or old wood. These are all great ideas when it comes to protecting and tending to your plants. Just be sure you get clear about your intentions before you start. Without a plan, you might go lopping off more than you need to and hurt the plant more than help it.

2. Cutting the plant improperly

Yes, there is a right and a wrong way to make a cut when pruning a plant. A proper cut helps the plant grow happier and healthier, but the wrong kind of cut can cause damage that takes a few years to recover from. At worst, haphazard cuts can easily kill the plant, or at the very least, make it more susceptible to disease and pests.

3. Pruning heavily during the growing season

You should never prune your plants during their heavy growing season. This time of year is typically spring through the late summer. By chopping off all its leaves, you might starve a tree if it doesn’t have enough stored food to make it through the hot part of the season. Spring and summer are when plants create their food and without enough stems with leaves to make that food, they could suffer or even die.

Two people pruning a tree

4. Not using sharp and clean tools

Who sharpens their pruning shears? You should! Dull pruning tools make rough and improper cuts, and this can cause more damage to the tree or plant and make it more susceptible to diseases and pests. So be sure you sharpen your pruning shears every year and disinfect them between each plant. Disinfecting them prevents diseases from transferring from one plant to another — you wouldn’t want your doctor to use the same syringe on you as they did on the last patient!

5. Over-pruning your plants

No matter the plant, there is such a thing as over-pruning. This might look different on different plants, so you’ll want to do some research on what is best for the plant you’re about to prune. For example, when pruning a mature forsythia bush, you can prune all the way down to 4 inches above the soil without harming the plant. However, that same pruning would kill a boxwood. So spend a few minutes before you put on your gloves and head outside to figure out what your plant needs.

When planting your garden and designing your landscaping, it can be easy to forget that plants need more than just water and sunlight. Pruning is an essential part of a healthy plant care routine, but it’s vital to the life of the plant that it’s done correctly. Avoid these common pruning mistakes to prevent accidental damage to your beautiful garden.

Rebecca Wolken
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Rebecca's has written for Bob Villa and a Cincinnati based remodeling company. When she's not writing about home remodeling…
Flowers to plant in spring: Your guide to beautiful blooms
Add these flowers to your garden this spring
Purple and white columbine flowers

If a long, cold winter spent indoors has you feeling down, then planning a spring garden bursting with life and color is the ultimate pick-me-up. From fruit trees to ferns, there are a nearly endless number of plants you can choose from for your garden. It's overwhelming to figure out where to start. That’s why we’ve put together this guide on flowers to plant in spring to help you get started. Check out these lovely flowers, pick your favorites, and start planting today for your best spring garden yet.
Pansy

Pansies are known for their bright, cheerful flowers that bloom in early spring. Coming in a mix of purple, yellow, blue, and white, pansies are an excellent way to welcome spring. You can plant them in your garden as soon as the ground has thawed enough to be workable, although you can plant them later in the season as well.

Read more
Butterfly bushes 101: A complete guide for gardeners
Grow your own beautiful butterfly bushes
Butterflies on butterfly bush

Creating a beautiful pollinator garden isn’t just good for the environment -- it can also be a wonderful sight! When spring arrives, stepping out into your garden to see it full of butterflies and hummingbirds can be a great source of joy. There are many plants you can grow to attract butterflies, but one of the most popular is the aptly named butterfly bush, or Buddleja davidii.

If you want to add butterfly bushes to your yard or garden, then this is the guide for you. We’ll walk you through everything you need to know to keep your butterfly bush happy and healthy.
Planting butterfly bushes

Read more
Add beauty to your garden with these stunning spring flowering shrubs
Shrubs that enhance your garden with lovely spring flowers
A forsythia bush with yellow flowers

Shrubs fill a unique role in the ecosystem. They provide shelter and food for birds and pollinators in areas where there isn’t enough room for trees, they help prevent erosion with their roots, and it doesn’t hurt that they’re often quite pretty. If you’re looking for a few spring flowering shrubs to add to your garden, you’re in the right place. Whether you want to grow your own hedge or simply fill out a few empty spots in your yard, one of these spring flowering shrubs is sure to be a great fit.
Hydrangea

Some of the most popular hydrangea species bloom in summer, like the endless summer hydrangea. However, there are plenty of spring-blooming hydrangeas too. Bigleaf and oakleaf hydrangeas both bloom in early to mid-spring, with oakleaf hydrangeas growing white flowers and bigleaf hydrangeas available in white, blue, pink, and purple.

Read more