View Full Version : Help with raising roses please?
Trish Brown
14-02-2006, 05:04 AM
Hi everyone. We've decided the beds containing my few remaining roses
could do with raising. The soil needs topping up with some decent
organic mix and a bit of mulch wants laying down (the present soil is
old and leached-out).
The question is, do I need to prune the roses, dig them up and replant
them in the raised beds (planning on putting about 8" of new soil in) or
should I let sleeping roses lie? I'm worried about collar-rot or
whatever it is that could go wrong where they're grafted!
Also, how big do climbing roses grow? I have a 'Climbing Queen
Elizabeth' which is about to take over the house! It's about three
metres tall and is now leaning over across the roof of the verandah! NB.
It's not really 'Queen Elizabeth'... the flowers are too tightly
petalled and too deep a pink: they're still very pretty, though.
Hope someone can help me with this. ;-D
--
Trish {|:-} Newcastle, NSW, Australia
GreenieLeBrun
14-02-2006, 11:13 PM
Trish Brown wrote:
> Hi everyone. We've decided the beds containing my few remaining roses
> could do with raising. The soil needs topping up with some decent
> organic mix and a bit of mulch wants laying down (the present soil is
> old and leached-out).
>
> The question is, do I need to prune the roses, dig them up and replant
> them in the raised beds (planning on putting about 8" of new soil in) or
> should I let sleeping roses lie? I'm worried about collar-rot or
> whatever it is that could go wrong where they're grafted!
>
> Also, how big do climbing roses grow? I have a 'Climbing Queen
> Elizabeth' which is about to take over the house! It's about three
> metres tall and is now leaning over across the roof of the verandah! NB.
> It's not really 'Queen Elizabeth'... the flowers are too tightly
> petalled and too deep a pink: they're still very pretty, though.
>
> Hope someone can help me with this. ;-D
>
> --
> Trish {|:-} Newcastle, NSW, Australia
Don't move your roses untill winter when they are dormant. Prune
heavily, dig them up trim the roots and replant them in the new bed,
make sure that the graft union is above the soil level. If they are
looking a bit tired at the moment give them a feed of a commercial rose
food (fertiliser).
As to how big do climbing roses grow, that's a bit like asking how long
is a piece of string. Roses respond well to heavy pruning (ever looked
at bare rooted roses in a nursery) if your climber is too large cut it
back to the size you want.
Chookie
15-02-2006, 08:43 AM
In article >,
Trish Brown > wrote:
> Hi everyone. We've decided the beds containing my few remaining roses
> could do with raising. The soil needs topping up with some decent
> organic mix and a bit of mulch wants laying down (the present soil is
> old and leached-out).
>
> The question is, do I need to prune the roses, dig them up and replant
> them in the raised beds (planning on putting about 8" of new soil in) or
> should I let sleeping roses lie? I'm worried about collar-rot or
> whatever it is that could go wrong where they're grafted!
I would vote for pruning, digging up and replanting. Do this during their
dormant period, if you can (in Sydney, it's July) because they don't mind
being bare-rooted then. If you want to do it earlier, don't do it until you
are *sure* the really hot weather is over.
If you have a choice about mulch, I hear they like lucerne.
--
Chookie -- Sydney, Australia
(Replace "foulspambegone" with "optushome" to reply)
"... if *I* was buying a baby I'd jolly well make sure it was at
least a two-tooth!"
Mary Grant Bruce, The Houses of the Eagle.
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