June care

Japanese Barberry in June: monthly care

Month-by-month careBerberis thunbergii

In June your japanese Barberry needs attention: prune.

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  • Prune
Japanese Barberry (Berberis thunbergii)
Foto: Sten Porse / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0

What to do this June

Prune

Japanese barberry tolerates hard pruning and responds well to shaping, making it ideal for hedges or topiary. The main pruning window is March, just before new growth begins, and again in June to tidy growth or maintain formal shapes. If your barberry is grown as an informal specimen, pruning can be minimal—this shrub has a naturally rounded habit and doesn't require annual cutting. For hedges, prune in March to remove any dead, damaged or crossing branches and to establish the desired shape. Use sharp hedging shears or secateurs; barberry stems are tough and spiny, so wear thick gloves and long sleeves. Cut back the previous year's growth by about one-third to encourage dense, bushy growth from the base. A second trim in June keeps the hedge neat and prevents it becoming leggy. Avoid pruning after mid-summer, as late cuts can stimulate soft growth vulnerable to frost. For specimen shrubs, light pruning in March is usually enough. Remove any dead wood and thin out congested centres to improve air circulation. If the shrub has outgrown its space, you can cut it back hard—even to within 30 cm of the ground—and it will regenerate vigorously. Older, neglected barberries respond well to renovation pruning in March; spread the work over two or three years if you prefer a less drastic approach. Japanese barberry flowers on the previous year's wood, so heavy spring pruning will reduce the modest yellow spring flowers and the bright red autumn berries. If berries are important to you, prune lightly or delay until after flowering.

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