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  2. When Not to Prune: 8 Times to Never Cut Back Your Plants - AOL

    www.aol.com/not-prune-8-times-never-211800957.html

    Essential Pruning Tips. Whether you are pruning a small tree or a perennial, use these pruning tips to promote a healthy, long-lived plant. 1. Remove dead, damaged, and diseased material right away.

  3. Pollarding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pollarding

    Pollarding is a pruning system involving the removal of the upper branches of a tree, which promotes the growth of a dense head of foliage and branches. In ancient Rome, Propertius mentioned pollarding during the 1st century BCE. [1]

  4. Acacia iteaphylla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acacia_iteaphylla

    Acacia iteaphylla flowers and foliage. Acacia iteaphylla, commonly known as Flinders Range wattle, [1] [2] Port Lincoln wattle, winter wattle and willow-leaved wattle, [3] is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae that is endemic to South Australia.

  5. Mariosousa heterophylla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariosousa_heterophylla

    Mariosousa heterophylla, also called the palo blanco tree (which is also applied to Ipomoea arborescens), [3] palo liso, guinola, [4] and Willard acacia, is a normally evergreen mimosoid plant in the genus Mariosousa native to Mexico. The Spanish common name translates into 'white stick', defining its peeling white bark.

  6. Acacia saligna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acacia_saligna

    Acacia saligna, commonly known by various names including coojong, golden wreath wattle, orange wattle, blue-leafed wattle, Western Australian golden wattle, and, in Africa, Port Jackson willow, is a small tree in the family Fabaceae.

  7. Acacia salicina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acacia_salicina

    Acacia salicina is a thornless species of Acacia native to Australia. It is a large shrub or small evergreen [ 2 ] tree growing up to 13.7 m (45 ft) tall. It is a fast grower, dropping lots of leaf litter , with a life span of about 10–50 years.