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roses

Caring for Your Roses

Roses are immensely popular for their gorgeous blooms and are a staple in any garden. Growing a beautiful, healthy roses is simple when you follow some basic tips, in this Garden Guide we look at what you should do when you take your rose home and care tips for the winter and spring time. Proper planting, care and protection are all that is required for beautiful, healthy roses!

Taking Your Roses Home:

  • Select a sunny location for your rose bush as they require at least 6 hours of sunlight.
  • Dig a hole twice the size of the rose pot in well drained soil and carefully remove the rose from the pot. If the container is decomposable, cut ½ moon slits in the side and remove the bottom.
  • Put the rose in the hole and fill in with a soil mixture of ½ topsoil and ½ existing soil.
  • Gently tap down the soil to remove any air pockets.
  • Water your rose thoroughly after planting. Unless it has been raining heavily, water once a week, deeply at the base of the rose.
Watering Your Roses

  • Do not over water! Many a rose has been killed by too much love!
  • Water at the base of the rose, not over the leaves, to discourage diseases.
  • Water deeply as required.
roses

Care of Hybrid Tea, Grandiflora & Floribunda:

Before selecting the perfect rose for your garden, it’s best to become familiar with the different classes and their individual growing characteristics. Check out our Garden Guide on Selecting the Right Rose to find the perfect fit for your garden!

Winter Protection

  • Wait until there is 1” of frost in ground before hilling up. Clean up any rose leaves on the ground to prevent a wintering site for rodents and diseases.
  • Cover with a mound of peat moss to a minimum depth of 10 inches(25cm). To prevent peat moss from being blown away, sprinkle a bit of soil overtop. Spray the surface of the mound with water, which will eventually freeze to form a crust. Keep the underlying peat moss and soil dry to prevent the build-up of ice around the graft. Do not use leaves which encourage rot.
  • Climbing roses need to be hilled to 2 feet. Do not prune until the spring.
  • Hardy Shrub, Old English and Wild roses do not need any winter protection.
  • Do not use a rose collar. This may create a hot environment too early in the spring, which can kill your plant.
Spring Care

  • Use a fine mist on your garden hose to spray away the last of the soil.
  • A warm April day is the prefect time to prepare roses for the summer season. Using your hands, (gloves are great!) carefully remove the peat moss from the base of the rose.
  • Prune away any dead wood, broken or damaged canes, weak or crisscrossing canes. All season remove any suckers which have 7 leaves as they will take over the plant.
  • Roses need air circulation so prune them back to 3 to 5 canes that are all facing outward. Prune unwanted branches at the base of the rose.
  • Your cuts should be made on a 45-degree angle to the bud. The bud should also be facing away from the center of the plant.
  • The final product should look like an outspread hand.
  • Water and fertilize your rose. Continue to fertilize once every two weeks until the end of July.

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