One of the things that makes perennials so attractive to home gardeners
is the ability to divide and transplant the perennials. Gardeners can use cuttings made from their
perennials in order to create new growth, share their plants with family
members and friends, or even to sell excess stock to nurseries, garden centers
and flower stores.
There are basically two reasons why gardeners choose to divide their
perennials. The first reason is for the
improvement of the health of the plants, and to encourage those plants to
produce more flowers. In many cases, an
older planting of perennials will become overgrown, and this can cause the
bloom quantity of those perennials to drop considerably. The other reason gardeners divide perennials,
of course, is to create new plantings.
Perennials can be divided easily, and these new divisions can be used to
create plantings in other parts of the garden, or even in another garden patch.
Even though many perennials can be divided easily, not all can. In generally, division is most feasible on
those perennials that grow in clumps, and those that have an expanding root
mass. Perennials that grow from single
taproot, on the other hand usually cannot be divided. That is because any attempt to divide the
taproot can cause the plant to die.
Those perennials that grow from a taproot should be increased by using
root cuttings or seeds instead of division.
The best time to divide those spring and early summer perennials that
can be divided is generally in the fall of the year. Perennials that bloom in the fall or late
summer should be divided in the spring instead.
To divide perennials, the ground around the plant should first be gently
lessened with a spading fork. The clump
should then be sliced with a garden trowel and then divided into four
parts. Those four sections should then
be broken by hand to create sections four inches by four inches. Those small sections should then immediately
be transferred to a previously prepared plant bed.
It is important
for the gardener to thoroughly wet the soil a day or two before the division is
to take place. Watering thoroughly will
make it easier to dig the clump. In
addition, it is important to add compost or other organic material to the
soil. The organic material should be
added to both the original plant and the new divisions. Doing so will give the plant the nutrition it
needs and help them to thrive better in their new location. The plants should also be watered thoroughly
and fed with a good quality fertilizer once they have been planted.
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