There are a LOT of different types of salvia. Some are perennial and some are annual. If yours is a perennial you should cut it back for the winter. Recommendations differ for different climates, but usually you can cut it back to 6-8 inches. Leave the stems a little taller in Prairie climates.
You should cut back Salvia once it has finished blooming. Most plants get cut back once they have finished blooming.
Cut it back after first frost.
Yes. Then it will reflower.
Leave it to the Spring then cut it back.
Salvia is fairly easy to grow. Plant it in the spring. Dig a hole two times larger than the pot it came in. Plant the salvia at the same depth as it was in the container. Prune after flowering. At killing frost, cut back to two inches high.
yes ,after the plant has begun to grow again and after any danger of frost has passed. The old stems, although unsightly, protect new growth. According to Global Garden.com, many gardeners recommend waiting to prune until you see new shoots emerging near the base of the plant. Trim your salvia very low in the summer to encourage re-blooming. Wait until your salvia has enjoyed a burst of early summer blooms, then cut the long stalks back deeply, removing at least half of the plant. If you have a mass planting of salvia, the plants will be at different heights. Cut these at varying levels, but cut back at least 50 percent of the plant. The salvia will reward you by bouncing back quickly with renewed vigor and lots of blossoms.
depends on the variety, you get both annual and perennial salvia varieties
If you prune a Forsythia in Winter you will cut off the following Springs flowers. Prune a Forsythia after it ha s flowered.
There is not an specific test for salvia divinorum yet, so there is no probability to get caught on a test.
cut it right back before winter hits after the summer bloom and and leave it
Google "do I cut back my grape vines" and you will get a season by season instruction on how to grow a grape vine.
You can cut some of its leaves to keep the plant healthy, you don't need too much of them to get high anyway, if you want a greater effect you should try salvia extracts
Do'nt prune it in the winter. Cut it back in the Spring just as growth starts as hard as you like.
I live in Arkansas and we have tiger lillies and surprise lillies. we never cut the leaves back for winter. we just let the leaves die a natural death and next spring they come back again I live in Arkansas and we have tiger lillies and surprise lillies. we never cut the leaves back for winter. we just let the leaves die a natural death and next spring they come back again