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Steve & Erin 06-07-2003 03:56 PM

rosemary
 
I have three rosemary plants in a pot that were started by see this spring.
I would like to keep this plant indefinitely. The plants are 6-8" high.
Should I cut it back now to encourage new growth and bigger root systems?
And when should I repot?

Thanks!
Erin



paghat 06-07-2003 06:44 PM

rosemary
 
In article WHWNa.19153$Ix2.8887@rwcrnsc54, "Steve & Erin"
wrote:

I have three rosemary plants in a pot that were started by see this spring.
I would like to keep this plant indefinitely. The plants are 6-8" high.
Should I cut it back now to encourage new growth and bigger root systems?
And when should I repot?

Thanks!
Erin


Prune mainly for aesthetic shaping. It'll produce new growth whether you
prune or not. I wouldn't prune them when that small.

-paghat the ratgirl

--
"Of what are you afraid, my child?" inquired the kindly teacher.
"Oh, sir! The flowers, they are wild," replied the timid creature.
-from Peter Newell's "Wild Flowers"
See the Garden of Paghat the Ratgirl: http://www.paghat.com/

Phisherman 06-07-2003 07:08 PM

rosemary
 
On Sun, 06 Jul 2003 14:51:35 GMT, "Steve & Erin"
wrote:

I have three rosemary plants in a pot that were started by see this spring.
I would like to keep this plant indefinitely. The plants are 6-8" high.
Should I cut it back now to encourage new growth and bigger root systems?
And when should I repot?

Thanks!
Erin


Your plants are doing well. Trimming rosemary will help determine its
shape. Repot when the soil is worn out. My rosemary cuttings have
been showing new growth in a small yogurt cup for two months and they
are about 8" high. I'll probably report in a month. They need quick
drainage, and none or very little fertilizer.

V_coerulea 06-07-2003 07:20 PM

rosemary
 
Leave the rosemarys alone until next spring. If you want to separate them,
do it in early spring before active growth resumes. Don't try to force them
to keep up active growth for the winter by giving more fertilizer. That's an
easy way to kill them. We grow them outdoors in the ground and in pots (zone
8, S Carolina). We protect them only if the prediction is for the temp to
drop below 20deg F. Actually we fudge with that figure and know they can
take 15 with few problems (some var are hardier than others). We also use
wood ashes to help counteract the acid soils we have. During their second
year, shape all you like as long as they're growing like wildfire.

"Steve & Erin" wrote in message
news:WHWNa.19153$Ix2.8887@rwcrnsc54...
I have three rosemary plants in a pot that were started by see this

spring.
I would like to keep this plant indefinitely. The plants are 6-8" high.
Should I cut it back now to encourage new growth and bigger root systems?
And when should I repot?

Thanks!
Erin






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