Mountain pine in June: monthly care
Month-by-month care — Pinus mugo
In June your mountain pine needs attention: prune.
- Prune

What to do this June
Mountain pine requires very little pruning and naturally forms a dense, compact mound or spreading shrub without intervention. If you want to maintain a tighter shape or control size, prune lightly in May or June when new growth—the pale green "candles"—has fully extended but before the needles have hardened. This is the only window when pruning is effective; cutting into old, brown wood will not stimulate new growth, and the plant will be left with bare patches that rarely fill in. To restrict size or encourage denser growth, pinch or cut back the new candles by one-third to two-thirds of their length using secateurs or simply snap them off by hand. This technique redirects energy into lateral buds and keeps the plant bushy. Work around the whole plant to maintain an even shape, and avoid cutting all candles on one branch, which can weaken it. If a branch has grown out of proportion or is damaged, you can remove it entirely back to the trunk or a main lateral, but do so sparingly. Do not prune mountain pine in autumn or winter; wounds heal poorly in the dormant season, and you risk disease entry or dieback. Similarly, avoid heavy pruning or shearing, which exposes bare wood and spoils the plant's natural character. If your mountain pine has outgrown its space, it's better to transplant or replace it than to hack it back severely. Older, neglected specimens that have become leggy or sparse cannot be rejuvenated by pruning. Remove any dead or broken branches as you spot them, cutting back to healthy wood, but otherwise let the plant grow naturally.