Red Robin in June: monthly care
Month-by-month care — Photinia × fraseri
In June your red Robin needs attention: prune.
- Prune

What to do this June
Red robin produces its vivid red young foliage in flushes through spring and summer, and pruning is the key to encouraging fresh growth. The main pruning window is May and June, after the spring flowering has finished and the first flush of red leaves has matured to green. A second, lighter trim in September tidies the plant before winter and can stimulate a final flush of colour in mild autumns. Use clean, sharp secateurs for stems up to pencil thickness and loppers or a pruning saw for anything thicker. For hedges, shear or trim back the new growth by about one-third to half, cutting just above a leaf node to encourage bushy regrowth. If you're aiming for a formal hedge, trim two or three times during the growing season—May, July, and September—to maintain a tight shape. For specimen shrubs, prune more selectively: remove any dead, damaged, or crossing branches first, then shorten vigorous shoots to shape the plant and promote dense branching. Avoid hard pruning into very old, thick wood unless absolutely necessary, as red robin can be slow to regenerate from bare stems. If an overgrown or neglected shrub needs renovation, spread the work over two or three years: take out one-third of the oldest stems at the base each spring, allowing new growth to fill in gradually. Always clear up and dispose of prunings, as Photinia can be susceptible to fungal leaf spot, and fallen infected leaves left lying around can harbour disease over winter.