The aim with pruning group two clematis is to retain a framework of old wood and also to stimulate new shoots in order to maximise flowering throughout the season.
Initial pruning and training
If young clematis are left unpruned they often produce very long single stems with the flowers produced only at the very top.
Unless the plant already has three or four healthy stems growing from the base, all newly planted clematis should be pruned back hard the first spring after planting. Cut back to just above a strong pair of leaf A bud is a small, undeveloped shoot that contains the potential for new growth. Buds are typically found on stems, where they can be apical (found at the tip) or axillary (found between leaf axils) and may develop into leaves, shoots or flowers.
buds about 30cm (1ft) above soil level. This will encourage multiple stems which can be trained in to supports to give a good coverage.
During the spring and summer, tie in new growth, spacing stems evenly on the support.
Pruning established plants
Prune in late winter or early spring (February) as follows:
- Remove dead or weak stems before growth begins. Check individual stems from the top down until you reach a pair of healthy buds, and prune just above them, removing the spindly or damaged growth above
- Avoid heavy pruning or flowers will be lost
Then prune again after the first flush of flowers:
- To encourage a second flush of flowers later in the season prune back some stems by cutting to large buds or a strong side shoot immediately below the blooms
- Top-heavy or overgrown plants can be gradually reduced over two to three seasons by pruning back harder after the first flush of flowers. They are unlikely to produce a second flush of flowers, but should flower again the following year, in late spring or early summer
Alternatively, leave clematis in this group unpruned, and then hard prune them to 30-90cm (1–3ft) from the base every three or four years in late winter (as for pruning group three). In the first year after renovation, they will only flower once.
Some mid- to late summer flowering clematis can be treated as either pruning group two or pruning group three, as desired. Examples include:
'Comtesse de Bouchaud' AGM
'Gipsy Queen' AGM
'Hagley Hybrid'
'Jackmanii' AGM
'Jackmanii Superba'
'John Huxtable' AGM
'Perle d'Azur' AGM
'Rouge Cardinal'
'Star of India'
Links
Clematis pruning: group one
Clematis pruning: group three