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How To Pinch Sweet Peas For Fuller Plants
Sweet pea seeds can be planted directly into deeply loosened soil as soon as the ground can be worked.

 


Gardening > Pinching Out
An article on pinching out:
Question
My question is: what does it mean to "pinch out" an herb?

I was visiting an acquaintance and she said she never pinches her petunias back and the plants remain full with lots of flowers. Does she have a different kind of petunia than maybe my mom always had?
lovegrowingflowers Said, ...

Pinching out
This refers to the removal of the growing tips of young plants such as fuchsias. It stimulates the growth of more sideshoots, which in turn encourages the plants to produce more flowers.

To pinch fall bloomers, start by removing up to 1/3 of the plant when it reaches about 6" tall. Repeat that process every 2-3 weeks, until the 4th of July. Then let the plant grow and set its flower buds.
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Some plants require regular pinching, while others need it only once or twice a year. Use care when pinching plants that flower to avoid cutting off young buds, and get to know each plant's flowering cycle before pinching at all.

When they send up their flower, pinch or cut it off.
Harvest in the late summer (usually the last week in August) when some of the leaves are starting to turn brown or the leaves are falling over.

Pinching
Some branching perennials respond well to pinching -- removing the growing tips by pinching off the small, developing leaves at the ends of stems. This forces more lateral growth, making the plant bushier and shorter.

Pinching Perennials. Soft-stemmed perennials, such as fuchsia and salvia, like to have their tips pinched. Pinching back the tips now will encourage an attractive bushy shape and lots of flowers.

Pinching, staking, and deadheading for better blooms
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Pinching ...

Pinching Pennies on a Gorgeous Lawn
Want to have a gorgeous lawn, but don't want to take out a second mortgage to pay for it? Here are a few suggestions: ...

Pinch candles. Conifers have new shoots called "candles". To promote dense branching and shorter limbs, pinch candles before their needles lengthen and harden.

Pinching Out: Removing the main growing point from a plant to encourage side growth.
Pleaching: A technique of weaving branches of a row of trees to make a more solid wall.

Pinching
Pinch back your herbs a quarter of the way back to promote bushiness and fresh growth. Deadhead dying flowers to keep them producing blossoms throughout June. Remove the dead leaves from spring blooming bulbs.

Pinching - Using your thumb and forefinger to remove (pinch off) the tip growth of plants to encourage a bushier growth habit.
Processed Manure - Sterilized, dried, and bagged manure. Usually sold in 40- or 50-pound bags.

Pinching out growing tips
Take out the growing tips of wallflowers to encourage the production of sideshoots. The plants will then develop into bushier, sturdier specimens. The more sideshoots a wallflower has, the more flowers will be produced.

Pinching: Removing terminal buds or growth to stimulate branching.
Rhizome: Horizontal underground stem distinguished from a root by the presence of nodes and buds.

Pinch off flowers
Another tip to hasten ripening is to pinch off any flowers and fruit that is too small and will not mature in time.

PINCHING OUT -- The removal of the growing point of a stem to induce bushiness or to encourage flowering. Also known as stopping.
PINNATE LEAF -- A series of leaflets arranged on either side of a central stalk.

Pinching back Nipping off the very tip of a branch or stem. Pinching promotes branching, and a bushier, fuller plant
Pistil The seed-bearing organ of a flower, consisting of the ovary, stigma, and style.
Pinked Notched.

PINCH OUT - Pinching with the fingers to remove the tip of a growing shoot to encourage lateral growth.

pinch To remove a growing tip from a stem, thus causing axillary shoots or buds to develop. See deadhead, shear.
pinnately compound leaf A leaf in which the leaflets are arranged on both sides of a common axis.

Pinch off dead or infested leaves as soon as you see them. This will stop them from contaminating the entire plant.

2. Pinch out growing tip of tallest stem,
removing it close to leaf joint.
3. New growth forms just below pinched-out
tip, makes plant bushy.

Pinching
Some kinds of perennials, including asters, chrysanthemums, phlox and salvias, benefit from being pinched back. Pinching creates a bushier plant that produces more blooms and is less likely to flop over.

How to Pinch Mums
Mums are naturally bright and hardy plants, but to encourage their beauty and growing potential you should take the time to pinch your mums. Pinching mums promotes full flowering and healthy branching.

Pinch each of white pepper, allspice and cinnamon
1-1 1/2 cups milk
In enameled or other non-metal saucepan, put fish scraps from cleaning (heads, tails, fins and bones) and water to cover to which 1 teaspoon salt has been added.

Pinch out growing tips
Step four -Pruning. For a pleasing look to your standard, a good ratio to keep in mind as you're pruning is 2/3 stem to 1/3 head.

Pinch back any annuals, Fuchsias, Geraniums, Cosmos or any other plants that might be getting a little leggy.
Pinch your Chrysanthemum's to encourage them to be bushier and have more blossoms. Pinch them again, every 6 inches or so, as they grow.

Pinch off flower spikes as they form. This will maintain basil's full flavor. Harvest the leaves regularly during the growing season. Basil leaves may be preserved by freezing. Rub olive oil on them first and place in ice cube trays or bags.

Pinch off dead flowerheads to promote new blooms, and to maintain an attractive appearance.
Insect and Disease:
Most insect problems can be effectively treated with insecticidal soaps and milder insecticides like Sevin.

Pinch back the growth to promote a bushy appearance. As fall arrives allow the growth to develop.

Pinch out the tops of the growing buds to make the plant bushier, and remove old blooms once they start to turn brown. This will help keep the plant blooming well all the way to the first frost.

PINCHING BACK: Utilizing the thumb and forefinger to nip back the very tip of a branch or stem. Pinching promotes branching, and a bushier, fuller plant ...

Pinch out lateral shoots above first node to form an umbrella-like canopy.
Shaping Fuchsias
Shaping for Pot or Bush ...

Pinch off the ends of branches that are growing too long.
Remove suckers-strong, fast developing shoots that grow straight up from roots or branches-from the main stem.

Pinching
Removing the growing tip of a plant so slow growth and encourage branching.

1 pinch of salt
1 cup vegetable, chicken or beef stock
1 tablespoon cornstarch mixed with 1 tablespoon water ...

If pinched to encourage large fruits, each plant will yield 3 to 6 large fruits.
Recommended planting for a family of five
20 plants ...

To pinch or not to pinch, that is the question. Suckers are sprouts that don't produce fruit. Some gardeners pinch them off to direct more energy to the fruit. Others leave them to help shade the fruit and protect it from sun scald.

Avoid pinching, squeezing, or twisting motions. Avoid activities or tools that put direct pressure on fingers or thumbs.
Weed the garden after irrigating or rain, as moist soil makes it easier to pull weeds with less resistance.

3 egg yolks
pinch of salt
1/2 cup butter
1 tablespoon lemon juice
3 tablespoons chopped mixed herbs: chervil, dill, tarragon and chives ...

Annuals - Pinch spent flowers at the base where they meet the stem immediately after blooms fade to encourage prolific color all season. Some annuals that respond well to deadheading are dahlias, geraniums, marigolds and snapdragons.

Basil must be pinched back as it begins to flower as once it flowers it loses flavour. Pruning back the flowers will also encourage it to grow bushier. Leaves should be cut in the morning after the dew has dried.

Summer Pruning: Pinch an Inch - Summer pruning, pinching, isn't recommended for trees that are growing slowly since it will further slow down growth.

"Please explain pinching back. My avo seed has grown a root of about 10cm and small roots coming out from the sides."
Sally
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To reduce wilting, pinch off all but the top tuft of two or four leaves from each cutting.

Keep those annuals pinched back. You wouldn't let your basil go straight up and go to flower, don't let your lamb's quarter either.

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Alternately, tall perennials can also be pinched in the late spring. Pinching your perennials along the stem will promote bushier, rather than upward, growth and will make it less likely that they will need to be staked.

* Pinch back your mums or other fall blooming perennials to make them nice and compact. Traditionally, you can pinch mums back until July 4th. I root the pieces I pinch off to make more mums and asters.

Pinch out the bud from the tip of each branch, so that fruit buds form lower down the branches. As a result of this shaping, the tree won't grow very big but it will keep on bearing.
Even better, grow your fruit trees flat against a wall or fence.

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When the new growth is 6-8" tall, pinch off the end of each stem to the next two leaves. Pinch them again when they have grown another 6", or about every 3 weeks.

The best way to tell whether a plant needs re-potting is to pinch the root-ball with your
fingers. If there is any flexibility in the compost it shows that the pot-ball has not been ...

- Many bachelor's-buttons branch naturally, but you can pinch the growing tips to encourage more branching, bushier growth, and more flowers. C. americana does need to be pinched, or you may end up with single-stalked plants.

Deadheading is simply pinching off old blooms to encourage new growth and transfer energy from making seeds. However, if you bought a self-sowing variety do not deadhead because you will lose the seeds.

Simply cut (or pinch) the stalks at about a ½ inch above the ground level. In about three weeks, you should see the new leaves growing again.

Small tubers should have two or three stems, large tubers three to six stems, so pinch off any extras. Some varieties, such as those used in hanging baskets, are grown for quantity of flowers, not for large blooms. These should not be thinned.

Keep side shoots pinched off, but keep leaves on the trunk. When the shoot reaches just above the cordon wire, pinch out the tip to force lateral branching.

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