Bush Trimming
We will trim down any shrubs or bushes for you.
CONTACT US and send a photo of where you're describing and what you need done. If not we can schedule an estimate. You can BOOK NOW by clicking the button the right. --------------------------------------------------> You can text us at : (757)-276-6003 Or Email us at : [email protected] |
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*price may vary by size*
WHY PRUNING IS IMPORTANT
Pruning or Trimming is essential to plants’ health, beauty, and safety. Keep all of these priorities— and a few others—in mind when you prune.
Regular and corrective pruning keeps trees, shrubs, and woody vines healthy by eliminating some problems and preventing others. Generally, pruning encourages new growth and vigor. Removing select branches lets light and air reach more parts of the plant. The ongoing priorities of pruning are the same for any plant: Remove damaged, diseased, or dead parts. When left on the plant, these parts become a harbor for pests and disease.
Prune With a Purpose
Accomplish other goals with pruning, improving the plant one way or another. Pruning is necessary when limbs create a safety issue, such as leaning precariously over a house or reaching overhead wires. These situations should be handled by a pro. When you wish to see more flowers or fruit on roses, raspberries, apples, camellias, or others, pruning is needed. Pruning also helps reveal the colorful bark of trees such as river birch and paperbark maple. And pruning prompts new colorful stems of shrubs, such as dogwood or kerria.
You can control a plant’s size with good pruning, whether you have a shrub planted too close to the house, an overly assertive vine, or a shapely topiary. Similarly, pruning helps maintain a plant’s natural form or creates a formal shape. It depends on the plant and your goal, whether you have a casual hedge of lilacs or a tidy border of boxwoods.
In the long run, pruning helps preserve a plant’s integrity and your investment in it. Trees, shrubs, and woody vines vary in their growth habits and needs for pruning. Pruning helps you get to know your plants better and prompt them to become their best.
Regular and corrective pruning keeps trees, shrubs, and woody vines healthy by eliminating some problems and preventing others. Generally, pruning encourages new growth and vigor. Removing select branches lets light and air reach more parts of the plant. The ongoing priorities of pruning are the same for any plant: Remove damaged, diseased, or dead parts. When left on the plant, these parts become a harbor for pests and disease.
Prune With a Purpose
Accomplish other goals with pruning, improving the plant one way or another. Pruning is necessary when limbs create a safety issue, such as leaning precariously over a house or reaching overhead wires. These situations should be handled by a pro. When you wish to see more flowers or fruit on roses, raspberries, apples, camellias, or others, pruning is needed. Pruning also helps reveal the colorful bark of trees such as river birch and paperbark maple. And pruning prompts new colorful stems of shrubs, such as dogwood or kerria.
You can control a plant’s size with good pruning, whether you have a shrub planted too close to the house, an overly assertive vine, or a shapely topiary. Similarly, pruning helps maintain a plant’s natural form or creates a formal shape. It depends on the plant and your goal, whether you have a casual hedge of lilacs or a tidy border of boxwoods.
In the long run, pruning helps preserve a plant’s integrity and your investment in it. Trees, shrubs, and woody vines vary in their growth habits and needs for pruning. Pruning helps you get to know your plants better and prompt them to become their best.