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Bud

Quick definition

An undeveloped growth point on a plant that can develop into a new shoot, leaf, or flower when conditions are favorable.

In plain terms

Buds are the plant's way of preparing for future growth. Inside each bud is a small cluster of developing tissues waiting to expand into new stems, leaves, or flowers.

Many buds remain inactive during dormancy, especially through winter. As temperatures warm and growing conditions improve, buds begin to open and produce new growth.

Some buds develop into leafy shoots, while others become flowers. On many fruit trees, flower buds are responsible for the blooms that eventually produce fruit.

Why this matters

Understanding buds helps gardeners make better decisions about pruning and plant care. Removing the wrong buds can reduce flowering or fruit production, while cutting above the right bud can direct new growth where it's wanted. Bud development also helps explain how plants respond to dormancy and seasonal changes.

In practice

Examples

  • A fruit tree develops flower buds during one season that open the following spring.
  • Rose bushes produce new shoots from buds located below pruning cuts.
  • Spring-flowering shrubs carry visible buds throughout winter before blooming.
  • Pinched stems produce additional side shoots as dormant buds begin growing.

Practical applications

  • Cut just above a healthy bud when pruning.
  • Learn to distinguish flower buds from leaf buds on fruit-producing plants.
  • Avoid removing too many flower buds before the blooming season.
  • Use pinching to encourage branching from dormant side buds.
  • Consider chill hours requirements when flower buds fail to open properly.

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