Planting Guide For Roses
JT
The art of planting roses doesn’t have to be a complicated thing to do. When you have the right knowledge there is no limit to how beautiful a garden or rosebush that you can create.
In this guide, you will not only have all of the right skills at your fingertips, but you will get 101 tips that you can use to grow your very own bed of roses. With this extensive manual at hand, you will never have to buy another bouquet again. Now you will have all of the beauty and delicious fragrance that roses can give you with you all the time.
Planting Guide for Roses
Check with your local gardening center or florist for the best type of roses to grow in you climate. If you are a novice, you should look for disease resistant types of roses because they require a lot less maintenance.
When planting roses, you want to pick a spot that is well lit in the morning. You also want an area that is sunlit for at least 6 hours a day. Roses need a great deal of light if they are to grow properly.
Pick an area that has plenty of well drained soil. Great soil has a PH level where the amount of acid in the soil is at about 5.5-7.0. You can get a testing kit for your soil at any garden center.
Organic matter like manure or lime helps to nourish the roots of your roses. You should soak the roots in water or puddle clay for many minutes, and cut off the root’s ends that are broken.
The first 3-4 weeks after planting your roses, you should water them often. Usually this is when the top 2 inches of soil is dry. Roses need a lot of hydration and food to remain healthy. Four weeks after planting, you should start soaking the bed every 2 weeks or so. You should do this in the morning for the best results.
Begin fertilization approximately 3 months after planting. Use 3-6 inches of mulch to control the moisture, temperature, and to stops weeds from coming up. Mulch also helps to lock in the vital nutrients your roses need in order to remain healthy. Planting in the Spring is the best.
You want to plant your roses in an area that is well circulated with air. Your roses will not grow in an enclosed or tight area. Dig a hole that is two times bigger than the amount of space that your roses take up. It makes it easier to plant them and creates a spaced area for them to grow with freedom. Poor circulation for your roses can cause fungal diseases. Using a larger hole also makes it easier for you to pull them up later and pot them if you’d like.
About the author: To find many more articles on roses, and other plants and flowers, head over to http://www.gardenarticles.com where we have all a gardener could want!
The latest information and news on Gardening:
Yahoo! News Search Results for gardening
Jeff Ball: Ergonomic hand tools are tops when gardening (Detroit News)
It occurred to me this past week, as we were putting our gardens to bed for the winter, that in the past year Nancy and I, unintentionally, set aside virtually all of the hand tools we had in the shed for the relatively new line of gardening tools put out by the Radius Co.
O'Neil: Castle tour in Scotland unearths common gardening bond (Times Herald)
Foulis Castle, in the Highlands of northern Scotland, gave me insight into Scotland's clan history and life today.
Sound Gardening: Put the garden to bed (Greenwich Time)
Time to end the gardening season: The leaves are finally down, so you can decide which ones should stay in your garden, which get mulched to turn into compost, and which -- already composted -- get put back on those beds and borders.
Gardening: Be proactive: Protect your trees this winter (The Star Press)
Do you have young trees planted in your yard or at your business? If so, beware of sunscalding or frost cracking injuries that can affect the health and aesthetics of the trunk of your tree.
Tropicalia: Edison & Ford Estates to host garden market (The News-Press)
If you've tried gardening in Southwest Florida after a lifetime of Northern training, you've probably learned that things are a little - well, a lot...
Spring blossoms for the holidays, thanks to a little gardening magic (New Orl...
For home gardeners, some techniques are well within reach
With These Activities, Gardening Need Not Take a Holiday (Washington Post)
Here are some upcoming holiday and horticultural events for November, December and January. They're free unless otherwise noted. Call ahead to see whether registration is needed.
Garden Notebook Nov. 15 (Journal Inquirer)
For a technophobe like me, it has been astonishing to discover how much I have come to rely on the Internet as a source of gardening information.
What's on Monday's WAVY News 10 Midday (WAVY 10)
-Gardening expert Dabney Morgan will live in our studios to take your questions about winterizing your yard. The phone lines open up at 12:30, and the number is 673-5420.
New varieties for food growers (Bangor Daily News)
According to All-America Selections, an organization devoted to promoting new flower and vegetable varieties with superior garden performance, there is a trend in gardening toward edibles. People are interested in growing their own food.
