Yes, bushes can grow back if they are cut down, as long as the roots are not completely removed. With proper care and time, new growth can emerge from the remaining roots.
Yes, bushes can grow back after being cut down, as long as the roots are not completely removed. With proper care and time, new growth can emerge from the remaining roots.
Yes, bushes can grow back after being cut, depending on the type of bush and how it is pruned.
No, a money tree will not grow back if it is cut down.
The only way to eliminate picker bushes is to dig them out. Cut the branches down as far as you can first. Make sure you get all of the roots out when digging the bush up so they do not grow back.
sometimes
Yes, a lilac bush that is cut down to ground level can grow back. Lilac bushes (Syringa spp) number among the woody plants that survive extreme, rejuvenation and severe pruning every three to five years. They tend to grow back, even when their trunks split right down the middle, unless accidental or deliberate, human- or Nature-inflicted trims take place during such moisture events as hail, rain, sleet and snow storms since few bushes, shrubs and trees handle wet weather event-launched cankers.
Of course you can.
Yes, a tree can grow back if it is cut down, as long as the roots are still intact. The tree may sprout new shoots and eventually grow into a new tree over time.
no
Yes, trees can grow back after being cut down through a process called regeneration, where new shoots or saplings sprout from the remaining stump or roots.
no only if you go back in time
whenever you feel like it