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  2. 12 Plants You Should Plant In The Winter (Plus, What You ...

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    Dormant Trees And Shrubs To Plant In Winter. Winter is a good time to plant dormant deciduous trees and shrubs, but not evergreen species. Dormant plant material has lost its foliage and directed ...

  3. As plants go dormant for winter, it’s an ideal time to prune ...

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    They’re just dormant. “Dormant plants are alive,” said Sharon Yiesla, plant knowledge specialist at The Morton Arboretum in Lisle. ... Leafless trees and shrubs seem almost dead in the ...

  4. How To Keep Your Plants Warm In The Winter When Cold Weather ...

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    Make sure plants enter the dormant season in a healthy and vigorous condition. Proper irrigation during autumn will help prepare landscape plants for the coming winter. Choosing Cold-Tolerant Plants

  5. Dormancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dormancy

    Chemical treatment on dormant plants has been proven to be an effective method to break dormancy, particularly in woody plants such as grapes, berries, apples, peaches, and kiwis. Specifically, hydrogen cyanamide stimulates cell division and growth in dormant plants, causing buds to break when the plant is on the edge of breaking dormancy.

  6. Chilling requirement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chilling_requirement

    Stone fruit trees and certain other plants of temperate climate develop next year's buds in the summer. In the autumn the buds become dormant, and the switch to proper, healthy dormancy is triggered by a certain minimum exposure to chilling temperatures. Lack of such exposure results in delayed and substandard foliation, flowering and fruiting.

  7. Winter rest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winter_rest

    Deciduous trees lose their foliage in the winter. Tree growth rings are a result of winter rest, as there is rapid growth in the warmer spring , then slower growth later in the year. Perennial and biennial herbaceous plants lose their frost-sensitive, above-ground parts before the winter, and regrow in the spring.

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

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

    When trees and shrubs are going dormant. Plant scientists contend that fall is the worst time to prune trees and shrubs. Woody plants are slowing growth and readying themselves to survive winter.

  9. Vernalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vernalization

    The term is sometimes used to refer to the need of herbal (non-woody) plants for a period of cold dormancy in order to produce new shoots and leaves, [1] but this usage is discouraged. [2] Many plants grown in temperate climates require vernalization and must experience a period of low winter temperature to initiate or accelerate the flowering ...