Ferns are wild, I couldn't see why anyone would actually buy these. If you cut them back they still grow, you cant hurt these plants, so cut back whenever you want..oh use a pair od scissors, or a knife to cut these back..I just pull em out.
Leave it to the Spring then cut it back.
Hopefully, they will be getting some light also! Yes, absolutely water them, but they will need much less water.
If the asparagus ferns are yellowing after a frost, then you can cut them during your fall cleanup. Here in Georgia, mine stay green unless we have a really bad winter. I don't remove them until I start getting the garden ready for spring planting which is sometime in mid-winter.
You can cut them back after flowers have faded or leave them to the Spring, when they should be cut back to allow new growth.
If you cut back the flowering stems of lupins after the flowers have faded you will get a secondary flowering. Any other cutting back should be to the ground in Spring when growth restarts.
Cut it back either late fall or winter, once it has died off for the year. Remove the dead portion of the grass prior to new growth appearing in the spring.
The spores of ferns are produce in sporangia.These sporangia are present at the back side of sporophyll(leaf let).
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
you take the leaf spring and cut it on half and then weld it back on and our problem is fixed
Some people cut it back in early summer so the sedum does not get so high.
As it is frost prone it will need some protection prior to winter and may need restrictive pruning if under glass. However, trim or lightly cut back shoots that spoil the shape and cut back growth that have produced insignificant flowers. Cut annually from mid to late spring - or as and when necessary. Please note, may cause discomfort if ingested and foliage may irritate the skin
Plant it in early spring because they tend to freeze back over the winter. You should note that they have vicious thorns and are a real chore to cut back in the summer after the monsoons (in southern Arizona) and in the early spring after chances of frost are over.