"Pic-Of-The-Week" Irises by canesisters

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#1 05/04/2012 8:41 am

canesisters
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From: Southeast VA
Registered: 11/16/2011
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rosemary, the shrub....

I have a little planter box around 2 sides of my porch.  I tried all sorts of pretty little bedding plants but the dogs would go out the door, down the steps and use the box as a launch point.  roll  This was fun to watch, but turned all my lovely plants into trampled mush.  So a couple of years ago I decided to plant rosemary.  I figure it's a good bit tuff-er and if the dogs brush through it, they'll smell good.
Well it worked.  big_smile   No more plant crushing.  Actually, the dogs don't seem to like the smell, they have stopped jumping off the planter boxes and now take the steps like the rest of the family. 
Here's the thing.  The plants are turning into shrubs.  I mean BIG!  One of them is so big that it's starting to spread open from the middle and sort of lay over a little.  I'm concerned that it's goign to break or split.  Can I 'prune' it like a hedge?  If so, when?  And how often?


Southern VA, zone 7
Learning to "dance in the rain"
Mom to The Cane Sisters: Candy (EE), Nova & Sola (S.Sussex), Raisin & Citizen (SLW), Hurra (FBCM), and Ineeda & Ameri (JG) + gail (33yr old horse), Yogie, Gilligan & Rosie (dogs) and Lily, Ella, Cougan & Ratatat (cats)

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#2 05/04/2012 8:58 am

marshallsmyth
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From: Lake Pillsbury California, z8
Registered: 03/21/2012
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Re: rosemary, the shrub....

You got a cool Rosemary plant there!

A friend has a Lavender that is ancient doing the same thing.

My old boss at the Greenhouse where I used to work has a different kind of Lavender that did that, but instead of trying to fix it to look all neat and trim, she got an old piece of wood from the river and tucked it in around the trunk and let it fall and grow around it.

Just an idea. Sometimes instead of struggling to make a plant have an image of trim neatness, it might be better to let it be it's old natural self.

Rosemary do take kindly to top dressing the soil and fish emulsion and kelp, stuff to let the tips grow fresh.


I live in the woods at a lake in Northern California. My garden is in a smallish clearing. Calypso orchids are among the wildflowers here.

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#3 05/04/2012 8:59 am

The Mama Chicken
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From: Central Tx, Zone 8a
Registered: 01/10/2012
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Re: rosemary, the shrub....

I'm pretty sure you can prune it whenever you want. They are very sturdy plants. They can get huge, I saw one the other day that was about 5 feet tall and 5 feet wide.


Happily starting a small homestead in Central Texas with 1 amazing husband, an 11-year-old son, 9-year-old boy-girl twins, a 4-year-old daughter, 4 EE hens, 2 Buff Orp hens, 5 New Hampshire cross hens, 1 New Hampshire rooster, 1 EE rooster, 3 Rouen ducks, 13 Pekin ducks, 1 Khaki Campbell duck, 3 dairy goats, 3 rabbits, a cat, 5 kittens, and a big, dumb dog.
http://mamachickensays.blogspot.com/

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#4 05/04/2012 9:06 am

canesisters
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From: Southeast VA
Registered: 11/16/2011
Posts: 767
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Re: rosemary, the shrub....

marshallsmyth wrote:

You got a cool Rosemary plant there!

A friend has a Lavender that is ancient doing the same thing.

My old boss at the Greenhouse where I used to work has a different kind of Lavender that did that, but instead of trying to fix it to look all neat and trim, she got an old piece of wood from the river and tucked it in around the trunk and let it fall and grow around it.

Just an idea. Sometimes instead of struggling to make a plant have an image of trim neatness, it might be better to let it be it's old natural self.

Rosemary do take kindly to top dressing the soil and fish emulsion and kelp, stuff to let the tips grow fresh.

Oh, I am all for the 'old natural self'.  I was just worried that it was getting so top heavy that it was going to damage itself.


Southern VA, zone 7
Learning to "dance in the rain"
Mom to The Cane Sisters: Candy (EE), Nova & Sola (S.Sussex), Raisin & Citizen (SLW), Hurra (FBCM), and Ineeda & Ameri (JG) + gail (33yr old horse), Yogie, Gilligan & Rosie (dogs) and Lily, Ella, Cougan & Ratatat (cats)

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#5 05/04/2012 9:07 am

The Mama Chicken
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From: Central Tx, Zone 8a
Registered: 01/10/2012
Posts: 650
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Re: rosemary, the shrub....

No, it is supposed to be a shrub. It will be fine.smile


Happily starting a small homestead in Central Texas with 1 amazing husband, an 11-year-old son, 9-year-old boy-girl twins, a 4-year-old daughter, 4 EE hens, 2 Buff Orp hens, 5 New Hampshire cross hens, 1 New Hampshire rooster, 1 EE rooster, 3 Rouen ducks, 13 Pekin ducks, 1 Khaki Campbell duck, 3 dairy goats, 3 rabbits, a cat, 5 kittens, and a big, dumb dog.
http://mamachickensays.blogspot.com/

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#6 05/04/2012 9:48 am

ninnymary
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From: San Francisco East Bay
Registered: 12/07/2009
Posts: 1764
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Re: rosemary, the shrub....

I had a rosemary that I was probably pruning every 2 months or so to keep it contained.  It finally got to be too much work so I got rid of it.  You could replace it with the trailing rosemary type.

Mary

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#7 05/05/2012 9:07 am

Southern Gardener
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From: NW Louisiana Zone 8a
Registered: 11/22/2007
Posts: 1468
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Re: rosemary, the shrub....

I have a huge rosemary bush by my gate and I've chopped it back several times - it just keeps growing and growing.  It will be fine to cut it back.


Joan - Zone 8a - NW Louisiana
"No occupation is so delightful to me as the culture of the earth, and no culture comparable to that of the garden."-- Thomas Jefferson

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#8 09/10/2012 9:20 pm

baymule
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From: Southeast Texas
Registered: 03/20/2011
Posts: 1199
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Re: rosemary, the shrub....

Rosemary skewers! Skewer steaks and toss on the grill. Make rosemary ka-bobs!


Garden in the front yard, chickens in the back yard.

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#9 09/11/2012 1:29 am

marshallsmyth
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From: Lake Pillsbury California, z8
Registered: 03/21/2012
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Re: rosemary, the shrub....

droolin

I have a small yearling Rosemary.

It is really great for things like Spaghetti and Lasagne. Pinch off a fresh growing tip a few inches long, bring it to the pan when the italian food is almost done, and pinch and roll and squeeze it in.

droolin


I live in the woods at a lake in Northern California. My garden is in a smallish clearing. Calypso orchids are among the wildflowers here.

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#10 09/11/2012 9:01 am

hoodat
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From: San Diego CA
Registered: 04/28/2010
Posts: 3263
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Re: rosemary, the shrub....

You can cut rosemary back hard with no damage. I have cut mine back to just a few main branches, almost to the ground, and it broke right back out of the hard wood.
It can also make a good hedge. I've even seen it used as a topiary and that takes a lot of pruning. Fall is probably the best time but it can be cut back any time of the year. The local bees like the flowers when it blooms and I've wondered what rosemary honey would taste like.


81 years old and still gardening. that's what keeps me young.

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