So... I was told more than once with several sources that if you trim some types of flowers that it will force the plant to make them re-bud and put out new flowers.
It seems like it works.
However... I have questions about it...
With roses, when the flower dies, the flower part itself dies, and in so dying it takes maybe 1 to 2 inches of the stem with it that also dies and shrivels up. This amount can vary.
So my question is if it matters in triggering new flowers if I cut off ONLY the flower part that's dead/dying, or if i have to cut off the entire dead part of the stem with it?
And does this vary in flowering species?
I hear geraniums are interesting with long bloom times also? So I'm curious about trying those. (Is this the right name for it, or is there something else with a similar name? Something similar but different to smaller flowers like marigolds.)
Thanks. And happy gardening.
It seems like it works.
However... I have questions about it...
With roses, when the flower dies, the flower part itself dies, and in so dying it takes maybe 1 to 2 inches of the stem with it that also dies and shrivels up. This amount can vary.
So my question is if it matters in triggering new flowers if I cut off ONLY the flower part that's dead/dying, or if i have to cut off the entire dead part of the stem with it?
And does this vary in flowering species?
I hear geraniums are interesting with long bloom times also? So I'm curious about trying those. (Is this the right name for it, or is there something else with a similar name? Something similar but different to smaller flowers like marigolds.)
Thanks. And happy gardening.