Readers, Welcome to my blog (formerly Birds, Blooms, Books, etc). I'm entering a new decade taking on the challenge of moving from Maryland after living there 46 years and learning about my new home here in New England in the Live Free or Die state - New Hampshire. Join me as a write this new chapter of my life.

Sunday, May 4, 2025

Update on forsythia.

Last spring our forsythia was a sad bloomer so I took a pruner to it in hopes that totally new growth would equal lots of flowers.  Here's last year's post so you can see how it looked then.

Well this year it had even fewer blooms! Argh!



It was as though each stalk if it was lucky got to have a bloom or two.


Now what to do?
We didn't plant this and to dig it out would be a tough job as the trunks are thick.

Maybe next year it will recover?



 

5 comments:

Tom said...

...if flowers are what are important, always prune right after the plant flowers. Pruning late in the year removes flower buds that have already formed.

Anvilcloud said...

Some things don’t seem to work in some places for some reason. (That’s a lot of somes.)

David M. Gascoigne, said...

Follow Tom’s advice. He’s the horticulturalist.

Granny Sue said...

Tom's right. I would leave it be this year and see what it does next. It may just take a bit for it to be vibrant again. Pruning it was the right thing to do, though.

Granny Sue said...

Oh, and ours bloomed poorly this year, but we pruned it a bit too late last spring. That, plus the drought.