Give your spirea some love after your prune it.
Cutting back magic carpet spirea.
After pruning give the plant a water fertilize it and renew the mulch.
With sharp shears cut each stem back to about 8 inches 20 cm from the ground.
Spirea that s not pruned or pruned to the ground each spring has a casual loose habit.
Propagate by softwood cuttings in summer or by division in autumn or spring.
Start hardwood cuttings from a mature spirea when the plant is dormant in late winter or early spring.
You also check of damaged or dead leaves and stems and cut them off.
You can use pruning shears and cut one at a time or hedge clippers and simply cut them all off at once it makes no difference.
Other common names japanese spirea magic carpet synonyms spiraea walbuma family rosaceae genus spiraea are deciduous shrubs sometimes suckering with simple leaves and short racemes panicles or corymbs of small 5 petalled white or pink flowers in spring or summer.
Start at the tips of your spirea when pruning by trimming it back to the leaf bud on the top.
To deadhead your magic carpet variety wait until the blooms begin to die back in.
Try to make the cuts within inch 6 mm of a leaf or bud.
Magic carpet spirea does not require pruning after its blooming period but pruning at that time helps maintain a neat appearance in the vigorous grower.
Remove any dead branches and use this trimming to shape the shrub.
A fertilizer of blood fish and bone is a good value option though you can also purchase commercial fertilizers.
Maintain the good shape as you cut sections of the shrub be.
Cutting it way back will stimulate new growth in tighter clusters so that you can get a more rounded compact shrub shape.
Throughout the summer the plants shape can be maintained by cutting back overgrown spirea shoots or stems as well as any dead or diseased branches.
More drastically cutting back spirea should occur in the fall or in late winter to early spring.
A slow release fertilizer is best.
Fall is the time for the most severe pruning of spirea.
After the last blooms expire shear off the tips of the stems just below the spent flowers.
Spirea shrubs also require deadheading throughout the spring or summer to ensure a continuous show of blooms.
If overgrown can be renovated by cutting back hard immediately after flowering.
Cut back as much as one third of each stem s length if the plant appears unkempt or overgrown.