by Pat
Tormey
“Many home gardeners have found that the
process of division is more traumatic to them, the gardener, than it is to the
perennial.” www.cce.cornell.edu/chemung
Ah, if only we could put in our flowering plants and forget
them. Unfortunately, most perennials, those ‘backbones’ of the garden, may
require occasional division in order to thrive.
As your plants grow over the years with new stems and new roots, they become
over-crowded. The plant may look larger,
but each stem is actually smaller and weaker.
If your perennial plants show any of the following, it may
be time to rejuvenate them through division:
1.
The flower quantity or flower size is
reduced.
2.
The stems and branches are tangled.
3.
The center of the plant dies leaving a
doughnut of new growth around the perimeter.
4.
The plant loses vigor, flopping over
or requiring staking when it never did before, or the leaves are paler or
yellow.
5.
The plant has out-grown the space you
have given it. This is especially likely
if it grows in a particularly hospitable site.
6.
The plant is in the ‘wrong place’ in
your garden.
7.
You want to share the bounty of your
garden plants with friends and neighbors.
It is illegal to divide perennials that are patented.
Starting
from the top and going clockwise: Daylilies, whole and divided. A
fibrous-root plant, cut in half. Yarrow just pulled apart. Sedum
pulled and cut as needed.
Many perennials in our area do best by being divided in the
spring – right now! The general rule is that summer and fall blooming plants
should be divided in the spring, and spring blooming plants in the fall.
Tips for successful division of
fleshy, fibrous, tuber, and rhizome perennials
1.
The day before, water the plant
thoroughly.
2.
Try to select a day that will be
overcast and not too hot. Then work
either in the cool of morning when the plant is fully hydrated or late
afternoon when the night will allow for better recovery. Exposed roots dry out quickly.
3.
Dig the hole the divisions are going
into, or prepare pots for them.
4.
Some plants benefit by having their
top foliage cut back, allowing you to see where the natural divisions occur
when making your cuts and reducing the loss of water through the leaves after
transplant.
5.
If the plant is large, use a spading
fork to dig all the way around it, well away from the base to minimize the loss
of roots. A fork does less damage to the
roots than a shovel or spade. Then lift
the entire clump out of the ground. You
may need to remove some of the dirt in order to see the root structure.
6.
If the whole plant doesn’t require
division and you only want few new plants, you can dig or cut out clumps around
the edges. The parent plant will recover
quickly and appear unchanged.
7.
Remove all weeds and grasses before
you replant! Inspect the plant for
unhealthy parts, usually an old woody center or rotten roots. Eliminate them.
8.
For fibrous rooted plants, use a spade
(or two), an old bread knife, or your fingers to separate the clump into plants
the size you want. Very old and well
established perennials, like day lilies or astilbe may require more aggressive
handling. I have heard of people using
saws!
9.
Keep the divisions moist and
shaded. Save the youngest pieces for
replanting, usually the ones at the edge of the plant. Each piece should have roots and a minimum of
2 buds / piece of the crown. Discard the
rest. The larger the pieces, the sooner
the plant will bloom again.
10. Plant
each division in a hole twice its size.
Fill in with good quality soil mixed with organic matter, keeping the
plant at its original depth. Don’t feed
with nitrogen until the following year - nitrogen encourages top growth and
the divisions need to focus on their roots.
11. Water
well. If the weather is especially hot
and sunny, you may need to add a sunshade for a few days.
There are a number of other techniques for propagating
plants, shrubs and trees: stem, leaf or root cutting, layering, grafting,
budding, scaling, scooping, scoring, offsets, runners, etc. They are beyond the scope of this article;
but what fun they might be!
See
http://planttalk.colostate.edu/topics/annuals-perennials/1018-perennials-how-to-divide/ for more
details.
Pat
Tormey retired and moved to Steamboat in 2014 where she quickly learned that
raising plants in this environment was very different than the decades spent
raising vegetables in the Midwest. She took the Master Gardener class
(2015) and has enjoyed learning more about gardening every year since.
Currently, Pat is helping out with the We Dig It! project, raising
vegetables for Lift-Up at the Community Garden, and volunteering at a local
farm-to-table project.
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