July care

Magnolia in July: monthly care

Month-by-month careMagnolia x soulangeana

In July your magnolia needs attention: prune.

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  • Prune
Magnolia (Magnolia x soulangeana)
Foto: Jean Tosti / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0

What to do this July

Prune

Magnolia × soulangeana requires very little pruning and resents heavy cutting, which can spoil its natural shape and reduce flowering. The species flowers on old wood formed the previous year, so any pruning should be done immediately after flowering finishes—ideally in June or July—to avoid removing next spring's flower buds. Focus on removing only dead, damaged, or diseased wood. Cut back to healthy tissue just above a bud or branch junction using clean, sharp secateurs or a pruning saw for thicker branches. If two branches are crossing or rubbing, remove the weaker or more awkwardly placed one to improve air circulation and prevent bark damage. Magnolias naturally develop an attractive, rounded or spreading crown and rarely need shaping. Resist the temptation to prune for size control; if your magnolia is outgrowing its space, the problem is usually poor siting rather than a need for regular cutting back. Hard pruning into old wood often results in ugly stubs, slow healing, and increased risk of disease, particularly coral spot fungus and canker. Young trees benefit from formative pruning in their first few years: remove any competing leaders to encourage a single main stem, and take out weak or inward-growing shoots. Always make clean cuts and avoid tearing the bark. Magnolia wood is relatively soft and wounds heal slowly, so use a sharp blade and prune only when necessary. If you must remove a larger branch, do so in stages to avoid ripping the bark, and avoid pruning in wet weather when fungal spores spread more easily.

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