When do you prune your shrubs?  I usually wait until early spring to do my major prune.  The logic behind this is that I want to see what is damaged in the winter weather before concentrating on the shape that I want from the shrub.

This is fine if you are vigilant in your pruning each year, but what if your shrubs get out of control?  More drastic action is then called for.  This can be done from November onwards as the plants go into winter survival mode and can take severe pruning.

Last week I saw an extreme example of this.  The two gardeners at work have over a hundred acres to look after and so have a much more challenging task than most of us in looking after the garden.  A stand of Portuguese Laurels had got to about twelve feet high and were stopping light coming into the building.  It was obvious that something had to be done about them.  I had looked at them many times and wondered how they could be tamed.

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The laurel hedge obscured the view from the walkway. This picture was taken mid way through the pruning and shows the walkway starting to reappear from the vegetation.

The front of the hedge was left as it was allowing the laurel to take its place in the vista, but the rest of each of the shrubs was cut back to around 5ft, or as the gardeners described it, a safe working height that would not need ladders in future.  Certainly this was a drastic prune, but the plants will throw out new shoots in time.  Hopefully it will be a good few years before any more work is needed in this area.

View from the walkway showing the drastic nature of the pruning (and some of the windows that will receive daylight again)

Drastic pruning can sometimes be necessary to rejuvenate areas.  Not only does it benefit the plants in the longer term as they will be invigorated by the pruning, but also it opens up more views for us to enjoy.

Well, for once, the weather is working with me.  It has been dry today and so I have been able to get on with more tidying up for the winter.  The job is almost done :).

I have found a few surprises as I tidied up.  One rose has decided to buck the trend and has gone for one last ditch attempt to flower.  Its buds look rather surprising against the lovely deep red berries of the Pyracantha.

There was also a Fuchsia defying the time of year.  It certainly was a sign of the times that I had to use my flash to be able to take photos at all, not what you really expect outdoors during the middle of the afternoon.

As you tidy up, lots of outstanding jobs become apparent, but there was one job that I almost forgot about.  As I prepared for the garden opening in June, I noticed that a couple of fence panels needed replacing.   To have had the job done then would have risked damaging the plants just before they were on show, so I put it on hold.  Luckily the panels are well protected from the vagaries of our weather as they are behind shrubs taller than them on my side of the fence and Leylandii on the other and so the fence is still standing – just!  I dare not risk them surviving any winter storms that may come our way, so the appointment has been made to get them replaced.  If the fence came down, the dogs might like the chance to explore our neighbours garden, but it would not be good for my state of mind!

You might want to go out and check your fences now – just in case.  If you have dogs, there is nothing worse than having a mad panic to get fence panels after a storm, just when everyone else is buying them too and they don’t understand why it is so important for your garden to be secure.

It has been a funny old year in the UK weather-wise.  The spring started out very dry, prompting water companies to announce that water restrictions would shortly be put in place.  This lead a couple of gardeners that I know of to acquire fish so that they would be able to fill their ponds (an allowable use of water when the restrictions came into play).  I have to admit to feeling a little smug that I already had fish in my pond.

Then, just as the restrictions came into force, nature decided to play a trick on us and opened the heavens on us day after day.  For a couple of weeks, the restrictions remained until it became obvious to everyone that our summer was over before it had even started officially.  Day after day, we endured downpours, particularly at weekends which are obviously the prime gardening days for those of us in the workplace.

It is amazing that we had more sun in March than August 2012 (stats thanks to my solar panel installation)

As the Olympics approached, we all wondered what the rest of the world would do trying to compete in the wet and cold conditions that seemed almost certain to fill our tv screens in August.  Boris Johnson (Mayor of London), proved once again that he is the master of the universe by managing to persuade the weather gods to allow some respite for the majority of the two and a bit weeks when the focus of the world was on London.

By then though, the depressing weather meant that I had given up on the garden for the year and so I sat back with the rest of the country to watch the festivities on TV (and for one day in person).  The garden was lush and full, but the lack of dead-heading meant that there was much less colour than usual.

By September, things started to dry up and we got a few days of summer, but it was too late for my garden, so we concentrated on walking the dogs and doing other things.

In the last few weeks though, I have started to get back my enthusiasm for the garden.  A couple of dry weekends were enough to tempt me back outdoors to try and reclaim the space and start to get ready for winter.  There have been too many years when I have left this job until the weather really closed in and there is nothing worse than having to pick up soggy, brown leaves and stalks.

I therefore felt quite righteous as I ventured back into the garden.  A jungle was there to greet me.  It quickly became obvious that I had many weekends of tidying up in front of me.  The first Saturday was spent cutting back one of my herbaceous borders, a job I had intended to continue for the rest of that weekend.  However, a couple of slippery false steps on the York Stone path of the “Long Walk” quickly reminded me that safety was more important and so the Sunday of that first weekend was spent pressure washing my paths!

Once safety had been restored, I turned my attention to the shrubs that had got completely out of control.  This was not my usual type of pruning to ensure that the plants kept just to their side of the path, but rather hacking back to allow me to actually walk down the paths at all.  Thank goodness for my shredder which allowed me to get even more greenery into the large green bags than I could ever have done without it.  The council picks the bags up every two weeks.  If I really wanted, I could make a visit to the recycling depot to empty them between collections, but there is something really satisfying about having two completely full bags and that gives me permission to stop working for the day.

Clearing up at the end of the gardening year always signals the start of a new one for me.  Of course, unlike the calendar year, there isn’t a precise date for the New Year.  It is rather a feeling and a gradual decline.  What seals the date is the arrival of the first gardening catalogue of the season.  This year that seems to be earlier than ever – or maybe all the gardening suppliers have had a disastrous season as everyone has been depressed with the weather.  Still now is the time to start again, plants love the warm soil and quickly put down new roots.  In the weeks to come, there is lots more tidying to be done, although I usually leave the real pruning of shrubs until spring so that removing frost damage can guide the shaping of a plant.

So, have a very happy New Year – here’s hoping the weather will be a little kinder to us next year – we certainly deserve that.