In winter, when most trees are bare, evergreens serve as much-needed columns of green. In summer, they provide shelter and a green backdrop for flowers. Read on for the tricks to growing and maintaining healthy evergreens.
June 30, 2015
In winter, when most trees are bare, evergreens serve as much-needed columns of green. In summer, they provide shelter and a green backdrop for flowers. Read on for the tricks to growing and maintaining healthy evergreens.
Birds need evergreen trees for shelter, and people need them for the same reason.
From large American hollies to cypress, pines, magnolias, or yews, every landscape should have a space for a carefully selected evergreen tree.
In most climates, set out new evergreen trees either before growth starts in early spring or after the tree has finished growing in early fall.
Most evergreen trees need full sun for at least three-quarters of the day. Those planted in the shade—including shade-tolerant hemlocks, arborvitaes, and yews—sprout fewer branches and have less attractive shapes.
Brighten evergreen foliage in summer by training colourful climbing vines, such as clematis, nasturtium, morning glory, and cup-and-saucer vine to twine prettily on the tree's south-facing side.
Yews are among the world's most popular needle-leaf evergreens.
Reduce a conifer's spread by pinching back or pruning the new green shoots that appear each spring.
Branches pruned from evergreen trees—especially conifers—make ideal winter mulch for perennials, small border shrubs, and strawberries.
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