deadheading, or, forever 21

You prob­a­bly know some­one like this: Through their young adult­hood, through the prime dat­ing years, they hit the gym hard, run, watch what they eat, and pay close atten­tion to styles so that they were always immac­u­lately dressed. But then they even­tu­ally meet a mate and set­tle down. As life’s other pri­or­i­ties take over, the for­mer jock or swimwear model puts on a few midriff pounds and stops being inter­ested in how they look to poten­tial suitors.

That’s the same phe­nom­e­non that hap­pens with a lot of flow­er­ing plants in the gar­den. Once they reach matu­rity, they go crazy putting out flow­ers to charm pol­li­na­tors. But before long, the plants have lit­er­ally gone to seen and start look­ing scrappy.

These are prob­a­bly plants that you invited into your gar­den because of their flow­ers, not because of their abil­ity to set seed. With many annu­als, shrubs and peren­ni­als remov­ing the spent flowers–deadheading– is a reli­able way to extend the bloom­ing period and keep the plants tidy.

Gaillardia plant
Here’s a plant of the peren­nial blan­ket flower, Gail­lar­dia pul­chella, that I’ve been dead­head­ing reg­u­larly for the last two months. Left to its own devices it would set seed and bloom a lot less or not at all. The process isn’t dif­fi­cult and can be a relax­ing way to spend a few min­utes in the gar­den, clip­pers in one hand and a refresh­ing bev­er­age in the other.

Of course one of the most sat­is­fy­ing forms of dead­head­ing is to cut flow­ers with a bit of stem to bring inside and enjoy in a vase!


Gaillardias to deadheadOf these two flow­ers, the one on the left is ready to be removed.



Bucket of deadheaded bloomsA week’s worth of spent flow­ers, ready for the recy­cling or com­post.


Here are some basic dead­head­ing guide­lines for a few other kinds of plants:

Many annu­als (marigolds, cal­en­du­las, cos­mos, zin­nias, gera­ni­ums, pan­sies, petu­nias): You can pinch off the old flower on most of these, or you can also use a sharp pair of pruners. For­tu­nately many annu­als are bred to be low main­te­nance, so they can look great for a long time even with­out the extra work. But a lit­tle atten­tion can keep them look­ing nicer, longer.

Plants with tall stalks of flow­ers (snap­drag­ons, flox­gloves, pen­ste­mons, some sages): Wait until the stem has fin­ished bloom­ing or has just a cou­ple of ragged flow­ers. Cut the entire stalk below where the low­est flower formed, and above a stem node.

Roses (most mod­ern hybrids): Cut the stems to just above a node where you see five leaves emerg­ing. Cut­ting higher may give you a few more flow­ers, but they’ll likely be smaller and on weaker stems.

Bulbs: Cut the flow­er­ing stem once the blooms have faded, mak­ing the cut towards the base of the plant. Even though bulbs gen­er­ally won’t rebloom the same sea­son after dead­head­ing, cut­ting off the devel­op­ing seed heads will allow the leaves to recharge the bulb for next year’s flow­er­ing instead of pro­duc­ing seed.

July 01 2008 04:25 am | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags:

4 Responses to “deadheading, or, forever 21”

  1. Greg on 01 Jul 2008 at 11:24 am #

    Ha ha…I love the way you com­pare fad­ing plants to the Hap­pily Set­tleds. Nice reminder about how to dead­head and when…and it really makes an incred­i­ble difference.

    Doesn’t hurt, too, to give a lit­tle extra feed­ing to those dead­headed plants, so they don’t get exhausted putting out all those new flowers!

  2. Cindy on 01 Jul 2008 at 2:40 pm #

    I too enjoy dead­head­ing. Once a neigh­bor asked me what I was doing and I stated I was dead­head­ing my daisies and she gave me the strangest look! I guess it might be a strange term to some­one who doesn’t garden.

  3. lostlandscape on 01 Jul 2008 at 8:21 pm #

    Greg–Don’t we all enjoy a lit­tle nosh to keep the energy up! Yes, the plants def­i­nitely seem to appre­ci­ate a lit­tle snack every now and then…

    Cindy–Any excuse to head out to the gar­den is great, even if it means some­thing as OCD as dead­head­ing. The lit­tle rit­u­als like this are so rewarding.

  4. Mary Ann on 02 Jul 2008 at 3:45 am #

    Tag. You’re it!
    http://urbangardenjournal.blogspot.com/2008/07/tag-im-it-and-now-following-bloggers.html

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