Thread: Rose in trouble
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Old 03-11-2006, 01:39 AM posted to rec.gardens.roses
Martin H. Eastburn Martin H. Eastburn is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Oct 2006
Posts: 101
Default Rose in trouble

We had graft bud roses last 17 years in a wooden pot. It almost died when we
got a hard freeze - but it was dormant and we had a camping heater and small tent
over it and another plant. It was an odd year that one.

We lived in the coastal mountains of Ca - several miles 'uphill and East' of Santa Cruz.

I suspect the suckers from the root plant might be starving the grafted one.
If the rose is still living above the graft - sample the roses when cutting off the
root stock - it might be a good rose but not one that sales - perhaps an old one in
the family line.

We have had roses for many years, now trying to learn more about them ourselves.

Martin
Martin H. Eastburn
@ home at Lions' Lair with our computer lionslair at consolidated dot net
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jtill wrote:
Snooze, that is a great site you recommended. I often want to root a
rose and have had only small success, this should help.
Joe T


Snooze wrote:

"Dave_s" wrote in message
...

A favorite rose of mine that I've had for many years, is in trouble.
The rose has stopped producing any new canes with blossoms.
Canes are dying and more may die soon. A lot of new canes are being
created but they are all at ground level, below the graft, I think.
I think this new growth are suckers, not new blossom bearing canes.

Where can I send jpg pictures so someone can advise me if any of this new
growth is not suckers? IF they are all suckers, how can I cause the
rose to produce canes above the graft? Should I remove all of the sucker
growth? I live near Los Angeles in Southern Calif in San Fernando Valley.


If there are any existing canes from the desirable rose, use it to create an
own-root clone. Using this method:
http://www.rdrop.com/~paul/hulse.html

Otherwise if the graft has died, you'll have to dig it out and replace it
with a new similar rose. That's why grafted roses are considered to be
temporary roses, with an expected lifespan of about 10 years.

-S




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