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Everything you need to know about pruning your cucumber plants

Everything you need to know about pruning your cucumber plants
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Every home gardener knows it takes a certain amount of TLC to ensure your plants are healthy and thriving. Whether it’s pest and disease control or staying on top of your watering schedule, there’s always something in the garden that will require your attention.

If you’re interested in improving the production and yield of your plants, pruning is an excellent way to achieve that goal.

Why Should You Prune Your Cucumbers?

Pruning is a common gardening practice that involves the clipping of vines, branches and stems and is done to improve the health of a plant. It works by forcing the plant’s energy into the fruit as it grows, which further stimulates growth and improves yield.

Cucumbers in particular have long vines that can reach six to eight feet long. For that reason, their growth is much easier to manage when they are supported by a trellis and pruned regularly. Keeping your cucumber plants trimmed also creates more space for other surrounding plants in your garden to grow.

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Another important reason to prune is to help control diseases. If your cucumber plant has too many leaves, this creates more opportunities for diseases like powdery mildew to develop due to reduced airflow around the plant. Fewer leaves also create more space for sunlight to reach the plant, which can also improve production.

Ultimately your goal when planting cucumbers is to harvest as much fruit as you can, which means you want most of the plant’s energy to go into the actual cucumbers instead of the leaves, and this is exactly what pruning assists in. The resulting fruit is often larger and more abundant.

Pruning can also help speed up plant ripening, which can result in an earlier harvest.

How To Prune Cucumbers

Now that you know why pruning is important, here are some tips on how best to do it. For starters, you’ll want to grab a good pair of pruning shears. (Pro tip: Make sure they’re disinfected to avoid the spread of disease).

Next, you’re going to want to identify the main stem of your cucumber plant and differentiate it between the off-shooting vines. You want to make sure to avoid cutting the main stem and instead focus on trimming the surrounding vines. Take a look at the bottom of your cucumber plant and you’ll notice there are clusters of stems that shoot off from the base of the primary stem; these are the ones you’ll want to cut. Keep in mind that you’ll only want to take off the lowest four to six, which will help the plant stay vertical.

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You’ll also want to check the plant for what are called “suckers” which are floral and fuzzy in appearance and take more energy away from the fruiting vines. Ones that are only a few inches long can be pinched off by hand; otherwise, you’ll have to use your shears.

When to Prune Cucumbers

You can start pruning approximately three to five weeks into growth, or when the plants are about 1 to 2 feet tall. Pruning is an ongoing practice, and depending on how fast your plants grow, should be done approximately every one to two weeks.

Cucumbers are relatively easy plants to maintain, and reaping a large, healthy harvest makes them worth the effort.

This story originally appeared on Simplemost. Check out Simplemost for additional stories.