• 0
  • Welcome to the Garden Ninja Gardening Forum! If you have a gardening question that you can't find answers to then ask below to seek help from the Garden Ninja army! Please make your garden questions as specific and detailed as possible so the community can provide comprehensive answers in the online forum below.

    Welcome to the ultimate beginner gardening and garden design forum! Where no gardening question is too silly or obvious. This online gardening forum is run by Lee Burkhill, the Garden Ninja from BBC 1's Garden Rescue and a trusted group of experienced gardeners.

    Whether you are a beginner or an expert gardener, it's a safe place to ask garden-related questions for garden design or planting. If you have a problem in your garden or need help, this is the Garden Forum for you!

    Garden Ninja forum ask a question

    Posting Rules: This space is open for all garden-related questions. Please be polite, courteous and respectful. If you wouldn't say it to your mum's face, then don't post it here. Please don't promote, sell, link spam or advertise here. Please don't ask for 'cheeky' full Garden redesigns here. They will be deleted.

    If you need a garden design service, please use this page to book a design consultation. I will block anyone who breaks these rules or is discourteous to the Garden Ninja Community.

    Join the forum below with your gardening questions!

    Please or Register to create posts and topics.

    Pruning Juniper ‘Skyrocket’

    I have a very mature Juniper Skyrocket that has now grown so it is obscuring my view from my upstairs window, and it’s still growing. It has grown taller and much quicker than I thought it would. Is there any way I can lower the top of the tree by 50cm to a metre without completely ruining it? I don’t really want to remove it as lots of birds use it and eat the insects on it.

    Hi @74turnip

    Thanks for your question about pruning conifers; I've answered on other types of conifer pruning in this post here, but the Juniper Sky rocket is slightly different!

    The problem you have with all trees, and in particular, conifers, is that once you top the tree out by cutting out its main leader, the hormones and energy usually get pushed further down the tree, which causes them to bush. For deciduous trees and shrubs, this is how we thicken hedges and create nice, round, relaxed forms rather than thin, straggly plants.

    However, with conifers, they have really strong apical growth, top growth. So when you cut that out, they tend not to bush but just stop growing; great, you may think, but on larger forms of conifer, it leaves a gap at the top so that you've always got this bare open top.

    With your Juniper, you should be fine if you carefully remove the lead stem just below some side growth to hide this void. So the answer is yes, you can top the tree out, but do take your time and cut just below some adequate side growth so you can keep the overall form of the tree.

    Lastly, thanks for considering wildlife in your decision. You're one of the gardening good guys, obviously!

    All the best

    Lee Garden Ninja

    Online garden design courses

    Share this now!