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Shrubs to be Pruned After Blooming

    

The best time to prune these shrubs that bloom on year-old wood is just after the blossoms have faded.  Then the shrub will grow new branches and form the flower buds that will bloom the following year.  For example, if you prune your azaleas in February, you'll have no blooms come spring time, because their buds grew on the wood you're cutting off.  (And please bear with us: these lists may tend to ignore the distinctions between shrubs, small trees, and even vines and groundcover- type plants.

Akebia
Cytisus (broom)
Rhododendron

Amelanchier (shadblow)Daphne (garland flower)
Ribes (flowering currant)
AzaleaDeutzia
Rosa (roses)
Benzoin (spice bush)Exochorda (pearlbush)

Spirea (bridal wreath)
Berberis (barberry)Forsythia (yellow bell)Spirea thunbergii
Buddleia alternifolia (butterfly bush)
Hydrangea hortensia
Spirea van Houtei
Calycanthus floridus (sweet shrub, strawberry shrub)
Jasminum (jasmine)
Syringa (lilac)
Caragana (Siberian pea)
Kalmia (laurel)
Tamarix (spring-flowering)
Celastrus (bittersweet)
Kerria japonica (Japanese honeysuckle)
Vibernum carlesi, V. lantana (snowball)

Cercis (Judas tree, redbud)Magnolia
Vibernum opulus (highbush cranberry)
Chaenomeles (flowering quince)
Philadelphus (mock-orange)
Weigela
Chionanthus (white fringe)
Physocarpus (ninebark)

Cornus coggyria (smoke tree)
Pieris (andromeda)

Crataegus oxyacantha (English hawthorne)
Potentilla (cinquefoil)

Cydonia (Japanese quince)
Prunus (flowering almond, cherry, plum)