Old rose bush growing very slow. Need help with care instruc
I have an old rose (bush?) that grows very slowly and only produces a few blooms a year. Any suggestions for care and pruning?
The rose looks healthy. They are heavy feeders so get some rose food and feed them regularly. After they bloom cut back roses to a thick stem with five leaflets. Roses actually will grow and bloom better with regular feeding an pruning. Make sure your tools are very clean. Use a degreaser to clean the sap off the tools and sterilize the shears with alcohol and wait 90 seconds or better yet use a torch. It will help prevent diseases.
It looks like you have a tea rose, as you have a single rose on a relatively long cane. Hybrid teas can be anywhere from 3-6 ft tall depending on the variety.
Floribunda and grandiflora roses would have flowers mostly in clusters (although some can be singles) on shorter stems than a hybrid tea, but more blooms.
Roses should be pruned into a vase shape for the best display and to open them up for better air circulation. The American rose society has some helpful how to videos. If you are interested, you can also join your local rose society, they often offer rose classes.
https://www.rose.org/about-roses/1319-2/
https://wattersgardencenter.com/wp-conte ... uction.pdf
It looks like you have a tea rose, as you have a single rose on a relatively long cane. Hybrid teas can be anywhere from 3-6 ft tall depending on the variety.
Floribunda and grandiflora roses would have flowers mostly in clusters (although some can be singles) on shorter stems than a hybrid tea, but more blooms.
Roses should be pruned into a vase shape for the best display and to open them up for better air circulation. The American rose society has some helpful how to videos. If you are interested, you can also join your local rose society, they often offer rose classes.
https://www.rose.org/about-roses/1319-2/
https://wattersgardencenter.com/wp-conte ... uction.pdf
When your rose shows long stems with few to no leaves, it is time to prune back to what ever is actively growing. That said; rose and asparagus are the swine of the garden. They want the most food, water, sun, and mulch.
Feed and pamper them and they will reward you. Neglect them and they will sit & sulk or die.
As an off topic remark: rose hips are a barter item for other flower/vegetable seed.
Feed and pamper them and they will reward you. Neglect them and they will sit & sulk or die.
As an off topic remark: rose hips are a barter item for other flower/vegetable seed.
(italics added)imafan26 wrote:How do you plant rose hips? I have had a few and I tried planting them, but none of them turned out. Do they require stratification?
Hand that man a cigar. Rose seed is a tough, hard coated seed that likes to sleep out of doors in its pot of soil in the frost and snow. It will wake up in the spring. The first pot of seed I tried germinating indoors did nothing. I left it out on a bench for the next winter (actually I forgot it). It germinated some of its seed. After that flush I discarded the pot at the front of a flower bed. Where the following spring (that makes spring # 3) what looked ever so much as the remainder of the seed all germinated...
Kindness and germinating rose seed are mutually exclusive.