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Spring Rose Care |
Spring Rose Care

Whisper
(Hybrid Tea Rose) |
Spring Rose Care - The Easy Way
Spring rose care will help get your roses off to a more
enjoyable blooming season. Modern roses are the longest blooming of
all shrubs. Many varieties start flowering in mid-late spring, with
recurrent bloom cycles through late fall. Unless you are looking to
grow absolutely perfect blossoms for competitive exhibition, roses
actually require much less work than you may usually read about.
Carefully chosen varieties of shrub roses will - with no summer
spraying - yield a full season’s bounty of blooms.
Spring Rose Care - Timing
Spring rose care should be accomplished after winterkill (if
any) has become apparent, but before the new leaves unfurl. There
are several ways to figure this. I’ve found it is most successful to
work on the roses just as the Forsythia starts to bloom, rather than
slavishly following the calendar.
Spring Rose Care - Feeding
If you hilled-up your roses with mulch last fall, the first
thing you need to do is to tear down the mulch mounds and spread it
around the roses so that the total mulch depth never exceeds 1 ½
inches. If you have more, remove the top layer. The first spring
rose care fertilization consists of four different products, a
handful of each should be sprinkled around the plant in a circle,
about 12-18 inches out from the stem: Espoma Rose-Tone®, Espoma Kelp
Meal®, Espoma Epson Plus and Greensand (Five additional feedings, a
month apart, consist of just one handful of Rose-Tone®—nothing else
Never feed after September 1st; late feeding encourages late
emergence of tender growth, which will be winterkilled). Use 1/3 to
1/2 as much of all products, at all times, on miniature roses.
Spring Rose Care - Pruning
Pruning is usually considered to be the most time-consuming of
all rose care tasks. Recently, a research study compared 2 beds of
the same Floribunda roses. One bed was hand pruned by skilled rose
growers. The other was pruned with a combination of a power hedge
trimmer and a lawn mower raised up on huge wheels. Throughout the
season, the two groups were compared for flower production. Guess
which plot did the best. Hint: it wasn’t the hand pruned plot.
Carefully chosen roses are much tougher and more forgiving then most
people realize.
At any rate, spring rose care pruning is not difficult if you keep
the following points in mind:
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You will need five good tools: sharp
by-pass pruners, by-pass loppers, small pruning saw, elbow
length (gauntlet) leather or rubber/plastic impregnated gloves,
and safety goggles.
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Over-pruning roses in spring tends to
weaken the plant. Never prune away more than one-third of the
live growth.
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On all roses, remove diseased, dead and
broken canes. A cane that has blackened from winterkill, or
suffered physical damage, should be shortened to an inch below
the offending section.
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Where possible, cut on a 45 degree
angle.
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Once-blooming (as opposed to
recurrent-blooming) roses require no further pruning in the
spring. These are primarily antique roses and old-fashioned
ramblers. Do whatever additional pruning necessary after
blooming in early July.
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Reduce hybrid tea roses to 4-5 vigorous
canes not shorter than 30 inches. Grandifloras should be reduced
to 5-6 canes not shorter than 36 inches. Reduce floribundas to 7
to 8 canes not shorter than 24 inches. In general, try to
achieve a vase-shaped plant for most roses in these categories.
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Especially on hybrid teas and
grandifloras, cut ¼ inch above an outward facing bud. Cut so the
45 degree angle allows water to drain away from, rather than
into the bud.
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Mini roses, shrub roses, rugosa roses
and repeat blooming antique roses just need a haircut, trimming
them to size.
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Treat English roses and romantica roses
as grandifloras.
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Trim modern climbing roses and pillar
roses to shape. Aged canes should be removed, as should those
that grow away from the support or criss-cross awkwardly.
Massive rejuvenation pruning is best postponed until early July
and done, if at all, every 3 to 5 years.
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To prevent cane borer, put a dab of
Nubark™ Rose Stick on the cut wound of any cut branch greater
than pencil thickness.
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To discourage diseases and insects, rake
up and discard all pruned material, including leaves, with the
trash.
Spring Rose Care - Spraying
On roses that have been troubled by fungus diseases a spray of
lime sulphur during spring rose care will kill the over-wintered
spores of blackspot and mildew. Mixing the lime sulphur with
horticultural oil will control a broader range of pests. To achieve
full effectiveness from the oil, this spray must be applied on a day
when it is not going to freeze the following night. Spray the roses
to the dripping point and spray all the surrounding mulch. This
spray must be applied when the roses are still dormant—before they
start to leaf out. During the next few days, top dress with enough
mulch so that total coverage is 2 to 2 ½ inches. As roses leaf out,
occasionally they are troubled by green aphids on the tips. These
are easily controlled with insecticidal soap.
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Climbing Roses & Pillar Roses
Our modern Low Maintenance, Climbing
Roses bloom on first year growth and offer prolific rebloom
throughout the season.
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