February is a quiet month in the Charleston garden—bare branches sketch their silhouettes against winter skies, and beneath the surface, plants are gathering themselves for the burst of spring. This is the moment for thoughtful pruning, before sap rises and buds swell.
Pruning now is not about forcing growth; it’s about guiding it.
This is the ideal time to prune roses, removing dead or weak canes and opening the plant to light and air. A well-pruned rose enters spring balanced and ready, rewarding the gardener with stronger stems and better blooms. Deciduous trees and shrubs also benefit from February attention—shaping and thinning are easier while branches are visible and plants are still at rest.
Charleston gardeners often ask about crape myrtles this time of year. The answer is simple: prune gently. Remove crossing branches, water sprouts, and any dead wood—but avoid heavy-handed cutting. The tree already knows how to grow; our job is merely to help it do so gracefully.
One important note: resist the urge to prune spring-flowering shrubs such as azaleas, camellias, gardenias, and forsythia. Their buds are already set, and pruning now would mean sacrificing this year’s blooms.
February pruning is an act of foresight. Each careful cut says, I see what you will become.
