What are your evergreens doing right now?
By now, your landscape is well into the growing and flowering season, no matter where you call home. June is a time of transition for your plants, so while your landscape is still actively growing, you might start to see signs of stress, as well (which is normal)! Here’s what to expect from your evergreens in June:
Keep up With Care
- Keep an eye out for standing water and dump it out if you can. This will help keep the mosquito population down.
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Stay on top of your watering and fertilizing schedule, especially with younger trees. Typically, it takes around 3 years for a tree to fully establish itself in your yard.
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Weed around the base of your tree, keeping it clear of anything that’s growing, including grass, which can steal nutrients from your tree. By keeping the base of your tree clear, you’re letting air circulate and decreasing the chance of pests and fungal issues.
- Resist the urge to prune. New evergreen growth that started out brightly colored should be developing its outer waxy layer and starting to blend in with older growth. Since your tree is still working hard to put out new growth, pruning now would hinder that growth. In general, you’ll want to wait to do any pruning.
- However, if you’re after a topiary style, you can shape your tree now. Just be sure to angle your edges slightly so that the bottom of your tree is wider than the top. This will give you the squared-off hedge look while avoiding any bare spots and allowing the sun to penetrate the bottom layer to promote growth.
Have questions about your evergreens? Email our Plant Experts
To Help You Grow
Weeding Fork
Grow Better Than Ever
Because you can never have too many evergreens, find more favorites to add to your space! Whether you want to create the thickest backyard privacy hedge or mix year-round texture and greenery into existing beds and borders, privacy trees are your best bet. See our most loved thujas, cypresses, hollies and more!
Lush Growth Starts Here
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As Content Strategist at FastGrowingTrees.com, Sarah is smitten with words and a fanatic for flowers, particularly cut florals and house plants. With a love for curating compelling content, she also enjoys furthering her plant knowledge along the way! A few of her favorite flowers include hibiscus, hydrangeas, peonies and dahlias.
Sarah’s fondness for plants was cultivated through many childhood trips to Longwood Gardens in southeastern Pennsylvania, as well as through her first job out of college at a floral event design company. In her free time, catch her snapping photos of anything and everything, day-dreaming about interior decor, and enjoying the outdoors any chance she gets.