Can you prune snowball viburnum?
Subsequently, one may also ask, how hard can you prune viburnum?
Hard Pruning's Three-Year Plan Late winter or early spring, depending on local weather conditions, is the time to start hard pruning. The first year, cut back one-third of the large, old branches to just about a few inches from the ground. Space the cuts evenly across the width of the viburnum.
- Prune Japanese snowball in early to mid-summer, after the bush finishes blooming.
- Put on gloves and safety glasses to protect your hands, skin and eyes.
- Prune and remove any dead branches, using anvil pruners for branches under five-eighths inch and loppers for branches up to 2 1/2 inches in diameter.
Besides, how do you care for a snowball bush?
It does well in sun or partial shade. The Snowball Bush is easy to care for and maintain. Feed with a water soluble fertilizer or granulated fertilizer just prior to it blooming in the spring and keep the soil moist by applying mulch. If you choose to prune this bush, do it after the flowers fall off in early summer.
Rather than cutting back the whole shrub, it is preferable to prune back about a third of the branches each year. Branches can be cut back to within a few inches of the ground. At the same time, remove any dead or damaged branches. For winter flowering viburnums (e.g. Viburnum x bodnantense and V.