March care

Bee Blossom in March: monthly care

Month-by-month careGaura lindheimeri

In March your bee Blossom needs attention: prune.

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  • Prune
Bee Blossom (Gaura lindheimeri)
Foto: Didier Descouens / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0

What to do this March

Prune

Gaura requires minimal pruning, but a single hard cut-back in March will keep plants tidy, encourage bushier growth, and prolong their lifespan. In late winter or early spring—ideally in March before new growth begins—cut back all the previous year's stems to within 5–10 cm of the ground. Use clean, sharp secateurs or hand shears for this task. This hard prune removes old, woody growth and stimulates fresh basal shoots that will carry the summer and autumn flowers. If you delay pruning until growth has started, you'll sacrifice some of the plant's energy, so aim to complete the job before mid-April. Don't be tempted to tidy up in autumn; the old stems provide some winter protection for the crown, and gaura can be borderline hardy in colder parts of zone 7, so leaving top growth intact until spring improves winter survival. During the growing season, deadheading is not strictly necessary—gaura produces such a profusion of small flowers on wiry stems that removing spent blooms individually is impractical. However, if the plant begins to look untidy or flowering slows in midsummer, you can shear back the flowered stems by about one-third. This encourages a fresh flush of blooms and prevents the plant from becoming too leggy or sprawling. In very mild winters, gaura may retain some semi-evergreen foliage. If this occurs, simply cut it back in March along with the old stems. Avoid autumn pruning, as this can stimulate soft new growth vulnerable to frost damage.

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