Home (Dividing)
Home  
 
 
Home » Gardening » Dividing


 

Dividing

Gardening DivergentDividing plants

Dividing Perennials - An Easier Way to Untangle Roots before Dividing Plants
By Marie Iannotti, About.com Guide
See More About: ...

 


Dividing irises - flower garden tips
Flower & Garden Magazine, August-Sept, 1994 by Doug Hall
1
2
Next ...

Dividing Tulip Bulbs
Tweet
A great many people love to grow tulips in their garden and for good reason. They are very lovely flowers. While many people grow them, not many people can keep their tulips blooming for more than a few years.

Dividing Ornamental Grasses
A master gardener tells what time of year is best for this task.
By Maureen Gilmer, DIY Network
Filed under: Ornamental Grass, Winter, Spring, Plants ...

Dividing Australian Tufties
Dividing is the easiest form of propagation.

Issue 52 Dividing Bulbs - Dividing Grape Hyacinths
Why buy more bulbs when you can divide the ones you have? With just a little digging, you can get lots of new starts from a cluster of bulbs like this.

Perennials need regular digging, dividing and transplanting to maintain healthy, attractive growth.

Dividing perennials
Nor sure when to do this? Well, read up on the techniques and purposes to dividing and propogating perennials.
Gardening for Beginners ...

Dividing perennials
Dividing plants will keep them healthy and strong and is a good way to control growth. It's also a great way to get new plants for free.
On this page ...

Dividing
Using a sharp, clean knife, cut rhizomes into sections. Each section should be at least three or four inches long, have at least one fan of leaves, and a few good roots.

Dividing Tubers and Rhizomes - Step 1
Carefully using a shovel, vertically cut the soil around the bulb colony, about 6-8 inches from the outermost stems.

Dividing Ferns
Easy step-by-step instructions to increase the number in your garden.
By Reds Bailey ...

Dividing ornamental grasses
Ornamental grasses have become a major part of the landscape in the last ten years.

DIVIDING PERENNIALS
Susan H. Barrott
Horticulture Technician
A perennial border packed with interesting leaf textures and colorful, fragrant blossoms is truly a treat for the senses.

Dividing
After several years, daffodils and some other species form clumps of multiple bulbs. The size of their flowers and length of their stems decreases as the bulbs become overcrowded.

Dividing Perennials
Dividing perennials is easily the best way to increase your plant stock. A few years after you've planted a perennial you'll probably notice that it begins outgrowing its allotted spot.

Dividing Bee Balm plants
Like other members of the Mint Family, Bee Balm can become invasive, but you can keep your clump contained
by dividing the clump in either spring or fall.

Dividing
If you decide to divide your peonies, do so in the fall. Peony plants should be very well established before you even consider dividing them. If root systems are damaged within one to two years, the plant will die.

Dividing Perennials -- Now is a good time to divide perennials, especially those that bloom in the spring. This way, they'll have time to establish themselves before it's time to flower.
Dividing Perennials ...

Dividing border perennials
The centres of many plants which form congested large clumps eventually exhaust the soil. There is little space for new roots to develop and the plants will produce poor flowers.

dividing iris plants How should I divide iris plants and prepare them for giving to fellow gardeners?
Doug says - about 6 weeks after they bloom or in very early spring....

Dividing/division A method of propagating plants by separating each one into two or more sections and then replanting.
Domestica A plant having been domesticated or cultivated near residences.

Dividing African Violets
Attention African Violet experts! When an African Violet starts too look like a few plants in one so it doesn't have that nice clump look should it be divided or is it time for a larger pot?
Life Of A Rose ...

Dividing
If your perennials are happy, most of them will need to be divided every few years.

Dividing your Bird of Paradise will be easy once you have removed it from the pot.
The roots are very thick and fleshy, so be careful, but don't be nervous, these plants are pretty tough.

Dividing is a great way to revitalize an overgrown Hosta or to propagate a prized plant. Dividing should be done after the plant has died back and before the ground starts freezing. Start by digging up the plant.

Dividing:
Dividing Pinks is probably the easiest route to go. This method requires you to dig up part of the plant with a rooted stem and then transfer it elsewhere leaving the parent plant.

Dividing of irises is best done now, in August, which is the same time of year that plantings should be made. Lift each clump by gently prying it loose from the soil.

DIVIDING: The process of splitting up plants, roots and all that have began to get bound together. This will make several plants from one plant, and usually should be done to mature perennials every 3 to 4 years.

Dividing Hostas - contains excellent, step by step instructions on dividing plants, with pictures.
Buy Flower, Vegetable and Herb Seeds Finest quality Ferry Morse Seed, America's oldest seed company with their famous "guarantee to grow".

Dividing mature oregano plants: To keep your oregano plants growing vigorously and at their best in flavor and health, divide your plants every 3 years.

Dividing Perennials in Your Garden
...nnial plants in this free video clip on perennial gardening. More
How to Plant Perennials ...

lit. 'dividing the ground'; an early term for garden design.
chôjô
the layering of experience and views in the garden space.

Tips for Dividing Perennials in Transplanting
How Much Sunlight Does a Sunflower Need?
How to Grow Mexican Sunflower (Tithonia Rotundifolia) ...

Lifting and dividing perennials can still be done in spring, providing you are not experiencing high temperatures in your area.

Division or Dividing
Cutting or pulling apart the roots sections enabling replanting to produce more of the same plant.

Digging and Dividing
Before you dig up crowded plants, prepare a bed so that you can replant the best divisions right away.

growing lavendar, dividing lavender Vegetables Lawns
Spring Bulbs
Click on ads to support this site.
Lavender ...

How-To Project: Dividing Perennials
by National Gardening Association Editors ...

If you are new at dividing hostas or other perennials, washing the dirt off the clump can be very helpful to see the individual plants and their rhizomes (from where the roots grow).

(L. septum, division; caedere, to cut or divide) dividing through middle of ovary septa; dehiscing or breaking open at a natural dividing line.septum search for term- n.

Dividing Clumps of Herbaceous Perennials
Overwintering Plants With Cuttings
Making More Woody Perennials
Keeping Seeds Viable
An Easy Way to Start Seeds
Thinning for Healthy Seedlings
Garden Design
Creating a Garden Plan the Easy Way ...

The procedure for dividing outdoor plants is similar to indoor plants with the exception that you will need to dig the plant out of the soil instead of simply tilting a pot.

The mizu wake, or water dividing stone, set in the water at the bottom of a waterfall was symbolic of the mythical carp that, through steadfast unwavering effort, climbed to the top of the waterfall to become a dragon, ...

This involves dividing the vegetable patch into four sections and only planting vegetables from a similar group (e.g. brassicas) in one of three sections in any one year.

It is usually greenish in colour and when a plant is actively growing the bark can be easily peeled off the stem to expose the cambium layer, since this is where the cells are dividing and have no strong bonding tissues between the cells.

On average, most perennials require dividing every two to three years after becoming established. If you don't divide them, they can crowd themselves out or spread into neighboring plants.

Next to the pond, Elaine planted a collection of trees that has become the dividing line between her property and the adjacent farm fields. These include an amur maple, black willow (Salix nigra), northern red oak (Quercus rubra) and alder (Alnus).

Propagate by dividing crowded clumps in the spring when new shoots appear. The best time is in the fall after the leaves die back or in August/mid-Sept, 30 days before the first frost.

Indeed, if lifting and dividing is
left until the spring, just as the plants are starting into growth, the chances of being
able to pull-apart plant divisions is much more likely than when the same plants are ...

2. Spoon mousse into 4 martini or wine glasses, dividing it evenly. Cover surface of each mousse with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 2 hours before serving.
Pure Food and Wine, 54 Irving Place, NY, NY, 10016; 212-477-1010.

CAMBIUM
Cambium is the layer of actively dividing cells beneath the bark. Cambium cells that divide toward the trunk or center of the plant and form xylem tissues. Those that divide toward the outside produce phloem cells.

They can also be propagated by dividing the tuberous roots of established plants.
How to Grow Blazing Stars:
Grow Blazing Stars in full sun. If grown in flower gardens, space 12" to 14" apart.

apical meristem A region of actively dividing cells at the tip of a growing stem or root.
arboretum An area devoted to specimen plantings of trees and shrubs.
asexual reproduction See vegetative propagation.

If you grow herbs in your outdoor garden, fall is the perfect time to begin dividing them. That way you can have a healthy, indoor herb garden all winter long.

Cell cycle - The complete sequence of events of a dividing cell.
Cell wall - A protective layer formed outside of the plasma membrane in plant cells.
Cellulose - A structural polysaccharide in cell walls.

The mathematical statement of the distance between plants calculated by dividing the square root of an area by the density of each species within the area.
GardenWeb Glossary of Botanical Terms
New Search:
Keyword(s): ...

A spade has a flat blade great for cutting edges, digging and dividing plants. The edge of a spade should be kept sharpened for clean and efficient cutting will cause the least amount of damage to plants.

Refresh clumps of bearded iris and gain new plants by dividing their underground stems (called rhizomes) anytime after bloom; in desert areas, wait until soil cools in fall.

Why not start with this video on how to plant water lilies and dividing hardy water lilies...runs just over 7 mins and is part of a very instructive series...sound on --- ...

See also: Plant, Flower, Spring, Soil, Perennial