Pruning African Daisies - tips on how and when to cut back
African DaisyPruning Pinching young African daisies two or three times early in the growing season creates a sturdy stem and a full bushy...Deadheading involves pinching or cutting flowers to the next set.
Pruning African daisies is necessary to keep them healthy and provide new blossoms.Pruning involves removing dying leaves and cutting the plants back to a more manageable size.African daisies can quickly take over a yard.Pruning will keep it under control.
Do you plant before or after it blooms?SpringPruning.Before new leaves begin to grow, cut the African daisy to 3 inches tall.By removing deadheading.Remove the dying and dead flowers from the garden.
What's the best way to keep your annuals and perennials flowering for as long as possible?This video shows how to trim.
African Daisies grow well in sandy, chalky, and even stony soils, which is not to say that they should be grown in such soils.They don't need much in the way of clay or manure.They prefer acidic soils.