Blackthorn in June: monthly care
Month-by-month care — Prunus spinosa
In June your blackthorn needs attention: prune.
- Prune

What to do this June
Blackthorn requires minimal pruning and resents heavy cutting, which often stimulates a flush of vigorous, spiny suckers. If you're growing it as an informal hedge or wildlife thicket, prune lightly in June after flowering has finished and the sloes have begun to form. This timing avoids removing the flower buds that form on the previous year's wood and gives birds access to the autumn fruit. Use sharp bypass secateurs or loppers for stems up to 3 cm; a pruning saw for anything thicker. Remove any dead, damaged, or crossing branches first, cutting back to a healthy bud or main stem. Thin out the centre slightly if growth becomes congested, but resist the urge to open it up too much—blackthorn naturally forms a dense, twiggy structure that provides excellent cover for nesting birds. Trim back wayward shoots to maintain shape, cutting just above an outward-facing bud. If you need to renovate an overgrown specimen, tackle it in March before the leaves emerge, removing up to one-third of the oldest stems at ground level; spread hard renovation over two or three years to avoid shock. Suckers are blackthorn's defining characteristic. If you want to contain spread, slice them off below ground level with a spade in March or pull them out while still young and soft. For a naturalistic thicket, let suckers develop freely. Avoid autumn or winter pruning, which encourages disease entry through wounds, and never use a hedge trimmer on mature wood—blackthorn's tough, spiny stems will blunt blades and the plant responds poorly to shearing.