Roses in South Eastern North Carolina Help
I need some opinions if anyone has time.
I spent over $200 at Witherspoons 4 years ago. They did well for the first year, ok for the second year and I pretty much replaced them the third year. I replaced them with knock off roses from Walmart and Lowes. ( I live where there are no other stores down east of Raleigh). Also to be fair the third year I developed quite the deer problem that I got a handle on the end of last season with "deer away" stuff. What I have now are some pretty scragaly looking plants. They have held on through the cold and windy winter, so far, and I didn't prune them much in the fall because I was afraid they needed all the help they could get. So here are the real questions: When do I cut them back this spring and try to bring them back to life and What does everything think of knock offs? Is that my root (no pun intended) problem or just the last few years of circumstances? Hang in there folks, Spring IS coming Thanks in advance, MJ Reply Reply to author Forward |
Roses in South Eastern North Carolina Help
OK, I'm in western NC - you can prune/thin now, tho last month would
have been better. Prune to above a leaf bud on the stems you wish to retain. Knock off roses or Knock Out roses? Knock Outs are a recent variety and are pretty hardy (I have a nice pink one). They should survive most anything except a nasty windstorm (that's how I lost one - it was way too top heavy because I forgot to prune it). In general, the issue I have is black spot. I have to use Bayer's Rose & Flower care to control it for any roses except the Knock Outs, as they are bred to be very resistant to it. If you don't know what black spot is - it's a fungus that first shows as black spots on the leaves. The leaves die and fall off, but the fungus is now in the canes. Using something like the Bayer product will help control it, but unchecked, it will keep killing off the leaves and after a couple of years, the rose usually dies. You may get regrowth from the roots, but this is not likely to be the same rose you bought - most roses are grafted, not own-root. hope this helped. On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 13:50:34 -0800 (PST), " wrote: I need some opinions if anyone has time. I spent over $200 at Witherspoons 4 years ago. They did well for the first year, ok for the second year and I pretty much replaced them the third year. I replaced them with knock off roses from Walmart and Lowes. ( I live where there are no other stores down east of Raleigh). Also to be fair the third year I developed quite the deer problem that I got a handle on the end of last season with "deer away" stuff. What I have now are some pretty scragaly looking plants. They have held on through the cold and windy winter, so far, and I didn't prune them much in the fall because I was afraid they needed all the help they could get. So here are the real questions: When do I cut them back this spring and try to bring them back to life and What does everything think of knock offs? Is that my root (no pun intended) problem or just the last few years of circumstances? Hang in there folks, Spring IS coming Thanks in advance, MJ Reply Reply to author Forward |
Roses in South Eastern North Carolina Help
On Feb 16, 8:45*pm, Fran wrote:
OK, I'm in *western NC - you can prune/thin now, tho last month would have been better. *Prune to above a leaf bud on the stems you wish to retain. Knock off roses or Knock Out roses? *Knock Outs are a recent variety and are pretty hardy (I have a nice pink one). *They should survive most anything except a nasty windstorm (that's how I lost one - it was way too top heavy because I forgot to prune it). In general, the issue I have is black spot. *I have to use Bayer's Rose & Flower care to control it for any roses except the Knock Outs, as they are bred to be very resistant to it. *If you don't know what black spot is - it's a fungus that first shows as black spots on the leaves. *The leaves die and fall off, but the fungus is now in the canes. *Using something like the Bayer product will help control it, but unchecked, it will keep killing off the leaves and after a couple of years, the rose usually dies. *You may get regrowth from the roots, but this is not likely to be the same rose you bought - most roses are grafted, not own-root. hope this helped. On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 13:50:34 -0800 (PST), " wrote: I need some opinions if anyone has time. I spent over $200 at Witherspoons 4 years ago. They did well for the first year, ok for the second year and I pretty much replaced them the third year. I replaced them *with knock off roses from Walmart and Lowes. ( I live where there are *no other stores down east of Raleigh). *Also to be fair the third year I developed quite the deer problem that I got a handle on the end of last season with "deer away" stuff. What I have now are some pretty scragaly looking plants. *They have held on through the cold and windy winter, so far, and I didn't prune them much in the fall because I was afraid they needed all the help they could get. So here are the real questions: When do I cut them back this spring and try to bring them back to life and What does everything think of knock offs? Is that my root (no pun intended) problem or just the last few years of circumstances? Hang in there folks, Spring IS coming Thanks in advance, MJ * *Reply * * Reply to author * * *Forward Thank you, it did and it makes me want to get rid of this Bayes stuff right now. |
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