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ROSE CARE

Roses may be the flowers of love, but there's nothing romantic about a bush that doesn't produce beautiful blooms. Don't worry. With a little tender loving care your roses will be as pretty as a picture.

Fertilize Regularly
The first feeding of your roses should be done when the bush first leafs out. For the remainder of the growing season, fertilize after each flush of blooms. Stop fertilizing about 2 months before the first frost. Use a commercial rose food or general-purpose fertilizer applied according to manufacturer instructions. Scratch dry fertilizers into the soil beneath the leaves - but not touching the canes or bud union - and water well.

Mulch Generously
Mulch helps minimize weeds, keeps the soil moist and loose, and adds essential nutrients. Organic mulch is best - try wood chips and shavings, shredded bark, pine needles, cottonseed or cocoa-bean hulls, chipped oak leaves or peat nuggets. Apply in the spring just as the soil warms and before weeds start to grow. (It can also be applied anytime during the growing season provided weeds are removed and soil surface is lightly cultivated.) Spread 2 to 4 inches over the rose bed, leaving some space open around the base of each rose. Replace mulch as it deteriorates during the year.

 

Rose Care How to Prune a Rose
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Rose Care Watering
Rose Care Winterizing
Water Adequately
Seldom can you rely on rainfall to be an adequate source of water for roses. The actual frequency of watering will depend on your soil and climate as well as the age of the plant. Try watering a few mornings a week - water slowly, until the soil is thoroughly soaked 12 to 18 inches deep. Soaker hoses or a hose with a bubbler attachment will help keep water from splashing onto foliage, and possibly spreading diseases. Soil-level and drip-irrigation systems are also effective.

Prevent Pests
The best pest prevention for roses is achieved by selecting top-quality plants and then properly caring for them. For more information about specific pests and controls for your area, check with your local nursery or garden center, co-operative extension agent or AARS public garden.

Prune to Promote Blooms
Pruning controls the size and shape of rose plants and for modern varieties, keeps them blooming repeatedly all summer long. Well-established hybrid teas, floribundas and grandifloras should be pruned early each spring after the winter protection has been removed and just as the buds begin to swell.

Old-fashioned roses and climbers that bloom only once a year should be pruned immediately after flowering since they bloom on wood from the previous year's growth. Generous proper pruning creates bigger plants and eventually more flowers per plant. Selective pruning of top growth can produce bigger, but fewer, blooms. Don't be nervous about pruning - there is no evidence that anyone ever killed a plant with pruning shears!

To prune roses you'll need the following supplies: sharp curved-edge pruning shears; long-handled lopping shears; and leather gardening gloves. The diagram above shows the preferred angle to prune.

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