Boxwoods


Welcome to Boxwoods, a gift and home furnishings store created out of a love for beautiful things, inspired by family and nature, and filled with a collection of special décor selected for quality, value and charm.


Welcome to Boxwoods! If you have a passion for traditional, classic décor then this is the place for you. Visit our store to find hundreds of affordable accessories, elegant gifts, and stylish furnishings to bring warmth and character to your home.


Boxwoods, perhaps no other shrub in the landscape is more multi-purposed than the boxwood. Tom Warren and you're watc Let's get started. So spring is the perfect time to prune boxwoods and the reason being is we get all t If you want a rounded boxwood, you can shape them rounded. Here I have more of a formal square hedge that surrounds t So in the s But all you want to do is just come in and shape that new growth and you can cut it flat around it And you really can't hurt a boxwood by pruning it. You can prune down as far as the leaves go. I wouldn't go past where the leaves stop down in the plant. And as long as you're doing that, you're going to be just fine with pruning boxwood. Once you've pruned your boxwoods in the spring, you may find yourself needing to prune perhaps two or three more times throughout the growing season in order to keep your boxwoods in the shape that you want them. If you want to avoid that or product, you can use t So Atremec is a plant growth regulator. So t So an inner node is the distance between two leaves. So we're shortening that up so the plant doesn't grow as fast as it otherwise would. You can apply that to these boxwoods and you would only have to prune one time in early spring. Once you've pruned your boxwoods to the desired shape that you Take a rake, go over the top of the boxwood really well. You're not going to hurt your boxwood raking the top of it out. What we don't want are those dead clippings decomposing down inside of the boxwood. That's just an opportunity for pathogens to start to feed on that decomposing material and potentially introducing bacteria or fungus to our boxwood, w So make sure you clean up your area really good after you prune. One t You're going to have a freeze come in and it's going to knock back that new growth a little bit. It may look brown or it may die altogether. You can prune right over the top of that if you want to. You can cut down a little bit further into that. Eventually you're going to have additional new growth come out and fill t Now if you're going to use the PGR that I mentioned earlier, what you'll want to do is make sure that all these little brown areas are completely green before you apply the PGR. If you apply the PGR beforehand, it's just going to be brown on top all spring and s Once your boxwoods have been pruned, it is a fantastic time to put out mulch if you need to put out mulch. The reason being is we've just pruned, we've cleaned those boxwoods off and there'still maybe some clippings on the ground and we can go back over the top with our mulch and cover that up and have a nice clean area in our landscape. And you can do this with bark mulch or If you're using pine straw, I have a pro tip for you here. Spread your pine straw out about a foot beyond the bed line. So get it out into the grass about one foot and then come back with a blower and lightly blow that pine straw back into the bed. It's going to roll under itself and leave a perfect crisp edge on your landscape bed. Fertilizing boxwoods couldn't be easier. They really don't need a whole lot of nutrients throughout the growing season. I use an organic fertilizer for them. T Now a pro tip for you with doing t Espoma makes all sorts of organic fertilizers. They make hollyton, they make berryton, but if you look at the guaranteed analysis of all those, they're all exactly the same. So it really doesn't matter what product you use from them. It's going to have the same nitrogen, phosphorus, potassi I'll make sure to leave a link down in the description below for t If you don't have organic fertilizer on hand, a synthetic fertilizer that I Osmocote is a slow release fertilizer. It's going to feed for six months. So starting right now in March, you can go ahead and put it out and it's going to feed throughout the entire growing season. Depending on the variety or cultivar of boxwood we're looking at, they're mainly rated USDA zones five through nine. I'm in zone eight And they do extremely well for me here. T When you're at the nursery and you look at a tag on boxwood, it's going to tell you to plant them in full sun and they do great in full sun. Don't get me wrong. However, these are native understory plants in Europe and in West Asia and in Northern Africa as well. And being an understory plant, they're not necessarily in full sun all the time. Here where I have these, technically t So I get about four hours of morning sunlight here where I'm at and then from there, they're in the shade all day and these have been in the ground for seven, maybe eight years now and you can see how full and lush they are. So they can take a lot of shade. Another they do not If you have really heavy clays, you may need to amend the soil. They also do okay in semi sandy soils as well. So when digging a hole for your boxwoods, you want to dig your hole twice as wide as the pot is. So t So it's about, we'll say eight, maybe 10 inches in diameter. So I want to make my hole roughly 20 inches wide and we want to make the hole as deep as the top of the potting mix that's in the pot. And so that's probably six or eight inches deep. So t So once your hole is dug, one t I want you to massage the pot really well. And the reason being is sometimes they get root bound And so the roots will begin to girdle in the pot. They'll circle around. So massage it really good and slowly massage your pot off of the root ball until it comes off And you can see here, these roots really aren't girdled all that bad. They're, they're bundled on the bottom, but they're not wrapped around all that bad. Once you've removed your boxwood out of the pot, you can then place it in the hole. Make sure that the bottom of your hole is not too deep. As you see here, the top of the root ball is going to be level with the ground. And then with loosely amended soil backfill so that there are no air holes in between your root ball and the native soil. If you're planting along with pre-existing boxwoods, you may need to go ahead and prune your boxwoods. The only purpose of t Once you've planted your boxwood, it's a good idea to go ahead and put some mulch down around the boxwoods. T It's going to help maintain moisture retention wit It's also going to aid in weed suppression as well. And also if you're planting it in full sun and it's the middle of so there'several benefits to putting down some sort of mulch after you plant your boxwood. A side note about these particular boxwoods that you see here be So my father passed away in 2021 from a sudden heart attack. And when were cleaning out And they had just started to root. And so what you're seeing here, these are roughly three or four year old boxwoods that came from little bitty cuttings that he started. And that's the cool they can be sentimental. Anyt I've got statuaries and a few other t But these boxwoods were started by my dad. One t And there's really just a handful of diseases that boxwoods can get. And most of them can be preventable just by where you plant them or just proper cultural techniques. One of them I see a lot is phytophtrine root rite. And so phytophtrine is going to be a disease that gets into the roots and can cause plant death. But here again, t If you're not planting them in really saturated soils, you don't have a whole lot to worry about. Where I see phytophtrine the most is going to be where they're planted in excessively wet soils. And you'll start to see some yellowing of the leaves. And if you dig around the root ball, you're not going to have that nice, w It's going to be black and that indicates rite. And that's probably phytophtrine. Another one I see is boxwood mites. So boxwood mites are tiny little insects that get on the underside of the boxwood. A good way to scout for boxwood mites is going to be to take a sheet of paper, put it underneath those leaves, shake the leaves really good. And if you see little tiny insects crawling around on the paper, chances are those are boxwood mites. Winter injury is another t Although that's technically not a disease or an insect, that's when we have a really harsh winter and you may have some dieback on your boxwoods. So for example, in 2021, we had a really hard freeze here. We got down to single digits And it had been really warm the week before and the boxwoods put out a bunch of new growth. And a lot of that got And it took a year or two for the boxwoods to fill back out, but they were okay. So if you live in an area that gets really cold, you may want to look into a more cold, hearty variety or cultivar of boxwood to offset winter damage. The most frightening of the diseases for boxwood is boxwood blight. So boxwood blight is a fungus that we have no cure, no treatment for. There are some cultivars that show some resistance and there'some active research going on and crossbreeding those to get resistance to blight because it's taken out a lot of boxwoods, especially in the mid-atlantic states in the northeastern states. Boxwoods that are several hundred years old have been killed by boxwood blight. The easiest way to avoid boxwood blight is prevention. Always buy a local nursery stock that's been inspected by your state. And if you can, propagate your own boxwoods. Don't bring anyt That's how most boxwood blight is being spread right now is from unclean nursery stock being so one way to mitigate t In general, boxwoods are fairly drought tolerant. The first year that you plant them, you may need to water them perhaps once a week if you're not getting rain showers. Then once they're established, you hardly ever have to water. Even in the s If you have a tip, trick or hack that we did not talk about Here on the channel, we're a community of learners and I would love to learn somet Guys as always,

Business Details

show address

show phone

go to website

Map
Hours
Mon 10:00 AM - 06:00 PM
Tue 10:00 AM - 06:00 PM
Wed 10:00 AM - 06:00 PM
Thu 10:00 AM - 06:00 PM
Fri 10:00 AM - 06:00 PM
Sat 10:00 AM - 06:00 PM
Sun 12:00 PM - 04:00 PM

Furniture Store in other cities

More categories in West Des Moines, IA