How To Gardening Pruning practices: Part 2

Pruning practices: Part 2

By Nancy Norris | December 23, 2016

| Last updated on June 16, 2023

Transform broadleaf shrubs into scenery

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Marcus and Vanessa Kollmann model European railroads on their Landschaft Gartenbahn. Living scenery wraps around the structures and cozies up to the track for a lush landscape. At left, a cut-leaf Japanese maple (Acer palmatum ‘Dissectum’, Zones 5-9) stretches over the street for bright, dappled lighting. After winter, the Kollmanns shape this tree while the branches are bare and it’s easy to see where the tips are headed (the primary indication for where to cut back plant material). When the sap starts to flow, they’ll wait until early summer to cut back aggressive branches and keep the weaker ones for slow, steady growth. They must stop pruning in late summer, so as not to encourage soft, weak new growth that will perish in their cold winter climate. Marcus Kollmann
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Joe and Ann Mortillaro’s Costa Plenti Railway is a theme park of historic miniature scenes of their native Canada. Near one path, a high crowned, red-leaf Japanese maple (Acer palmatum ‘Atropurpureum’, Zones 5-8) frames a town. The maple’s large palmate leaves are somewhat mitigated by their dissected shape. Notice that the distant scene appears farther and smaller due to those larger leaves up front. Nancy Norris
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In the park-like setting of Joe and Miriam Sommer’s Munee Pitt & Lunisea Railway. The craggy bark grabs our attention where the Sommers have pruned away side branches on the lower trunk. Finally, they chose one of the dozen or so boxwoods, probably a miniature-leaf box (Buxus microphylla, Zones 4-9), that will stay in scale longer than some other types. Nancy Norris
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Next to their car barn, Dave and Jenny Miller planted a varied landscape of evergreen and deciduous plants, woody and herbaceous. In the foreground, left to right, they will deadhead their perennial pink-flowering heather after blooming and keep the young boxwood’s multiple trunks clean of branches. Up front, the perennial thyme groundcover doesn’t need much fussing because they’re trying to get it to spread. Nancy Norris
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Behind the barn on their Radishbahn railway, Barry and Bonnie Altman allow the grass to mat into a nest suitable for a rusting tractor. It may need to be called into service for mowing this field one day.
Nancy Norris
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If you can’t beat ’em. . . . Pat and Dennis Johnson, after mowing the 1:1 lawn (far right), get out the scissors to trim the scale wayside grass on the retaining wall just above. Here, grassy weeds look just right as the Johnson Pass Spur leaves town.
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Figure 1
Nancy Norris
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Figure 2
Nancy Norris
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Figure 3
Nancy Norris

Are you practicing? In the last issue, we discussed the need to jump into the garden, shears in hand, and take a stab at pruning our needle-leaf conifers, such as spruce and false cypress, to create pointy, airy cones. Illustrations showed starting points and steps for finishing the scale tree; by following an illustration, you know when you’re done, just as in building a model structure. Over and over, year after year, we practice keeping living scenery manageable and out of the way of oncoming trains.

Woody broadleaf shrubs, whether evergreen like boxwood or deciduous like maples, model a different style or shape than our cone-shaped conifers, and require a new look at the role they play in the scenery. Most railway gardeners, such as the Kollmanns (photo 1), like to plant umbrella-shaped trees in town to shade buildings and keep scale plastic figures cool. Without our attention, the greenery could turn into fat bushes, hiding those buildings and townsfolk. Finally, we’ll take a look at how to clean up herbaceous perennials, including grasses.

Open a canopy from a sphere
Broadleaf means “not needle-like.” The scale purists are already whining, “Too big!” But perceptive modelers, like the Mortillaros, use the photographer’s trick of placing trees with larger leaves to hang in front of their mid-field scenes. This gives the viewer perspective and the sense of sharing the same ground as the artist (photo 2). In other areas, broadleaf “trees” could hide a fence or other 1:1 object.

To make the lower branches (trunk) visible and the top ones lush, think of the lowest trunk-like branches as scaffolding or supports for the roof of finer branches bearing the canopy of leaves. Photo 3’s specimen boxwood shows how the Sommers divided the trunk near the bottom into interesting gnarled arms reaching up and out to hold up the top. When younger, it might have looked similar to the Millers’ boxwood in photo 4. Both boxwoods have been pruned of lower branches, crossing and crowded branches, and tips that shoot for the sky. Figures 1-2 show how cuts may keep the plant open and small throughout the life of the railway.

Pinch back perennials
Herbaceous perennials live year after year but die back to the ground in winter. When low temperatures kill the stems, the flattened tops of the plant can act like blankets to protect the roots from excessive cold and promote self-seeding. More importantly, stems act like mulch to prevent repeated freezing and thawing, which heaves poorly rooted plants up and out of the ground.

At the end of winter, prune or pull away the dead material to see green sprouts for the new season. In warmer climates, perennials can be pinched or pruned back after blooming, relieving the plants of dead flowers and broken stems for a tidier look. Some perennials, like heather, require pruning (deadheading) immediately after blooming to encourage next year’s blooms (photo 4).

Get into grasses
It makes us smile to see how seasoned railroad gardeners have solved some problems, owing to their many years of dealing with the same issues. Here are two solutions for perennial grasses.

How many times have you seen a worn tractor lying fallow in a forgotten field? That’s how the Altmans pictured their peaceful Canadian farm in photo 5. The Johnsons learned how to deal with bird-planted lawn-grass “weeds” next to their depot—they just shear them with scissors to keep the look in scale (photo 6).

Tidy up
Keep your pruners handy when visiting the garden. Deadhead spent flowers. Use grass trimmers for groundcover. Dethatch grasses (figure 3). Pull out dead leaves from between branches with your gloved hand. Shake or knock the upper trunk a bit to allow loose, dead defoliation to fall out. It’s okay to leave an occasional lifeless tree or branch; it’s only natural and provides a perch for dragonflies and small birds. But be aware that most gardeners’ eyes will repeatedly fall on that deadness. Some people think there’s a best time to prune out diseased or dead wood, and there is—any time.

Let the sun get into branches to light up your scenery. With each pruning experience, the way to best care for your growing landscape becomes more obvious. It’s living art. As Neitzsche declared, “We have art so that we shall not die of reality.”

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Nancy Norris

Prune with a purpose

“Open up” the tree to let in goodness:

• light for photosynthesis
• air for fungus-free leaves and stems
• water for hydration and cleaning off pests
• space to let defoliating leaves fall
• aesthetically balanced shape resembling a tree, not a shrub.

On an “opened up” little tree, one can imagine a scale bird flying down to perch on one of the shelf-like branches.

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A deciduous dwarf spindle tree/burning bush accents the Raging Beaver Diner. Late fall, the leaves turn a glorious magenta. In winter the winged stems add interest to Gary’s Story Lines.
Nancy Norris
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Bright-yellow blooms light up Ray’s mainline on his Mystic Mountain Railroad. The best time to prune this shrubby cinquefoil into a scale tree is late spring and late summer after the flowers have finished. The neighboring cotoneaster seems to reach into the photo with outstretched leggy branches, which always need cutting back or removal.
Ray Turner
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Near the end of their blooming season, several varieties of thyme blend near the track. Ray prunes creeping stems away before they root under and through the ties. At the top of the photo, spent brownish-gray flowers require pruning to give sun and air to next year’s crop.
Nancy Norris

How do you prune your broadleaf trees and groundcovers?

Gary Everitt
Salem, Oregon, Zones 8-9
Dwarf burning bush

Last year we had such a beautiful early spring that most of the plants produced leaves and flowers much earlier than usual. I didn’t have an opportunity to prune until May. I prune according to the schedule I was told by an orchardist years ago: “The best time to prune is when you have the time.” So I have been known to prune any time of the year, but I usually start pruning the miniature plants in the spring after the branches have a huge growth spurt. Sometimes (read “usually’) a long rainy spring up here can put that off until the new growth is pretty long and after the dwarf Alberta spruce have already passed their new-growth soft stage. Our burning bush (Euonymus alatus ‘Compactus’, Zones 4-9) gets a big growth spurt in the spring, so I cut it way back. This year I severely pruned it back to give clearance for a streetcar on a new trolley line that I installed behind the diner.

Ray Turner
San Jose, California, Zone 9
Shrubs and thymes

Shrubby cinquefoil (Potentilla fruticosa var., Zones 2-9) can be maintained tree-like by thinning and removing low-growing branches every few months in the growing season. It blooms in the spring and all summer. Cotoneaster naturally wants to be a bramble, so it requires monthly pruning to open it up and remove branches growing downward. In the spring it fruits nice “apples” but I’m not convinced they are worth the pruning effort.

Elfin thyme grows thick with time and just needs shearing around the track every few months.

Woolly thyme sends out runners, which will root if left alone and require cutting off near the track.

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