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Caring for Your Plant This should just take a few minutes every spring. MULCH WEEDING DEAD-HEADING WATERING PRUNING Small leaf varieties and evergreen azaleas can be pruned just after bloom and can be expected to re-sprout profusely if in sufficient sunlight. This is rarely necessary. Deciduous azaleas hybrids should be pruned on a regular basis when they get old and bloom less profusely. Remove a third of the old stems to the ground level every year for 3 years to induce vigour. Large leaf hybrids can be pruned in several ways. Dormant central leaf buds which are - slender and pointed like the tip of a pencil, as opposed to flower buds which are large & round (see Fig. #3), can be removed from terminal shoots in late summer to induce branching. Shoots with flower buds will self-prune. Alternatively, last year's shoot can be removed to about 1 inch above last year's whorl of leaves (See Figure #4). This is a more drastic measure; next year's bloom is forfeited, but branching is more assured. Wayward branches can be removed at any time being sure to leave no stubs. Figure 3 :
Figure 4:
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