When should i cut back my lilies




















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Lilies are stunningly exotic flowers with their tall stems which thrive in areas with full sun or partial shade, consistent water levels and good air circulation. Care for lilies is on par with that of most bulbs and perennials and when it comes to grooming them after they have bloomed, very minimal pruning is required.

After your lily flowers have started to fade, you should remove them straight away. If you allow them to remain, the spent blooms, like most flowers, will convert into seeds and on lilies, this is best avoided. Your lilies have a finite amount of energy and a great deal of it gets diverted into producing seeds. If you prevent this from happening, your lilies can put that energy into producing more flowers. If your lilies have finished flowering and you are left with just the seed pods, these can be removed just leaving the stem until autumn or spring when it can be cut to just above the soil.

To remove the spent blooms, you can simply cut them off but its usually fairly easy just to pinch them off by hand. Alternatively, you can bring a bit of nature indoors by cutting the stalks as soon as your flowers are about to bloom, and using them for indoor flower arrangements.

If you opt for this route, be sure to store them in cold water with indirect sunlight and they will last for days. Whether you cut the spent blooms and discard them, or cut the stalks and bring them in your house, you should always disinfect the tools you use each time by wiping them off with a mixture of 9 parts bleach to 1 part water or rubbing alcohol.

Wipe down the blades between each cut. But let the main flower stem stay. Continue to water and fertilize. Do you plant bulbs in your yard? What do you think?

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Shop Featured Holiday Categories. Home Decor. Holiday Decor. Christmas Trees. Holiday Lighting. Gift Cards. Do you cut lillies down to the ground after bloom? Email Save Comment 2. Sort by: Oldest. Newest Oldest. Glads, I don't know, but for lilies, don't cut them down.

Like Save. In late fall, after the stem is brown you can cut it back to the ground, but not before. Related Discussions Do you plant bulbs in your yard? While peonies are not a bulb they've been introduced to this discussion so I'm going to take the opportunity to tell you about my own experience with them. People say that peonies don't like to be moved or disturbed.

Though the yellowing leaves are less attractive, they are still producing energy that the bulbs are storing for the next year's growth. As you trim back the flower stems and remove dead foliage, monitor your lilies for pests, such as aphids, slugs and snails. A blast of water usually dislodges aphids, while hand-picking slugs and snails reduces their damage to the leaves.

If you're growing tiger lilies, watch for signs of lily mosaic virus, including streaked or mottled, distorted foliage. Dig up infected plants and put them in the trash. Always sterilize your cutting tools by dipping the blades into a household cleaner like Lysol or Pine-Sol.

This helps prevent the spread of plant disease from one plant to the next. Although Asiatic lilies thrive in the coldest regions, protect Oriental, trumpet and hybrid lilies by cutting back the dead foliage to the soil and covering the garden bed with a deep layer of loose mulch.

Container-grown lilies can be moved into a cool location like a garage or garden shed during the worst of winter's cold. Keep them lightly moistened and don't let the soil dry out completely. A number of other flowering bulbs are known as lilies but don't belong in the genus Lilium.

Daylilies Hemerocallis spp. Like the true lilies, wait until the foliage is completely brown and dead before cutting back daylilies and other bulbs' leaves for the winter. Peace lilies Spathiphyllum spp.



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