Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
New to forum - question about roses
Hi everyone,
I'm new to this forum and new to gardening! I wonder if you could offer some advice? I have just received a hybrid tea rose. I'm in the East Midlands and I'm wondering whether it is okay to plant it at this time of year? Should I start preparing the soil now to plant the rose in a few weeks time in mid-January? Or should I wait until March-April? If I need to wait until spring what should I do to take care of the plant in the meantime - how and where should I store it? Any advice would be much appreciated. Thanks very much. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
If the rose is in a pot, leave in that, but keep it protected from the pot freezing. If it is is bare-rooted, then heel the plant into a border till planting time in the spring. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
New to forum - question about roses
beccabunga wrote:
Edh78;871870 Wrote: Hi everyone, I'm new to this forum and new to gardening! I wonder if you could offer some advice? I have just received a hybrid tea rose. I'm in the East Midlands and I'm wondering whether it is okay to plant it at this time of year? Should I start preparing the soil now to plant the rose in a few weeks time in mid-January? Or should I wait until March-April? If I need to wait until spring what should I do to take care of the plant in the meantime - how and where should I store it? Any advice would be much appreciated. Thanks very much. It is too late this year for safe planting. If the rose is in a pot, leave in that, but keep it protected from the pot freezing. If it is is bare-rooted, then heel the plant into a border till planting time in the spring. Totally disagree. -- Rusty |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
New to forum - question about roses
On 14 Dec, 12:11, beccabunga
wrote: Edh78;871870 Wrote: Hi everyone, I'm new to this forum and new to gardening! I wonder if you could offer some advice? I have just received a hybrid tea rose. I'm in the East Midlands and I'm wondering whether it is okay to plant it at this time of year? Should I start preparing the soil now to plant the rose in a few weeks time in mid-January? Or should I wait until March-April? If I need to wait until spring what should I do to take care of the plant in the meantime - how and where should I store it? Any advice would be much appreciated. Thanks very much. It is too late this year for safe planting. If the rose is in a pot, leave in that, but keep it protected from the pot freezing. If it is is bare-rooted, then heel the plant into a border till planting time in the spring. -- beccabunga Absolutely not. The bare root planting season is approx Nov-March - into early April if you must. Container plants can go in anytime the ground isn't frozen or waterlogged. Watch the watering in the summer. It is a common misconception that plants can be 'warehoused' in pots. They can't, they will almost certainly deteriorate and sooner or later they will need to be re-potted or better still planted. Rod |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
New to forum - question about roses
Edh78 wrote:
Hi everyone, I'm new to this forum and new to gardening! I wonder if you could offer some advice? I have just received a hybrid tea rose. I'm in the East Midlands and I'm wondering whether it is okay to plant it at this time of year? Should I start preparing the soil now to plant the rose in a few weeks time in mid-January? Or should I wait until March-April? If I need to wait until spring what should I do to take care of the plant in the meantime - how and where should I store it? Any advice would be much appreciated. Thanks very much. You don't say if it bare rooted or in a pot. If potted it does not matter. If bare rooted and you allow the roots to dry out it will not bode well. If you cannot plant it now because the ground is not prepared just heal it into a spare spot, it will be ok then for a few weeks. It is fine to plant now. -- Please reply to group,emails to designated address are never read. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
New to forum - question about roses
Edh78 wrote:
Hi everyone, I'm new to this forum and new to gardening! I wonder if you could offer some advice? Plesed to - first, this is Usenet, so not a forum. I have just received a hybrid tea rose. I'm in the East Midlands and I'm wondering whether it is okay to plant it at this time of year? Should I start preparing the soil now to plant the rose in a few weeks time in mid-January? Plant it any time you like - the sooner the better. If it is bare-root, it might pay to spread straw over the roots until things warm up, but really, it shouldn't be necessary, even in the East Mudlands. Or should I wait until March-April? If I need to wait until spring what should I do to take care of the plant in the meantime - how and where should I store it? In the ground, where it belongs. Leaving it until the spring (I presume it must be container-grown?) tempts fate, especially if you have a memory like mine. -- Rusty |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
New to forum - question about roses
"Edh78" wrote Hi everyone, I'm new to this forum and new to gardening! I wonder if you could offer some advice? I have just received a hybrid tea rose. I'm in the East Midlands and I'm wondering whether it is okay to plant it at this time of year? Should I start preparing the soil now to plant the rose in a few weeks time in mid-January? Or should I wait until March-April? If I need to wait until spring what should I do to take care of the plant in the meantime - how and where should I store it? Any advice would be much appreciated. Thanks very much. Welcome to this Newsgroup. You don't say if it's pot grown but assuming it is then plant it asap, it will be safer planted than left outside in it's pot so the roots can freeze. A mulch over the roots once planted will ensure they stay nice and snug. If your rose is bare rooted (no soil around the roots) then that makes it imperative you get it planted immediately to stop the roots drying out and dying. If you can't plant it in it's permanent position then plant it somewhere else for the time being (called heeling in) and replant in the early spring. -- Regards Bob Hobden W.of London. UK |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
New to forum - question about roses
"Edh78" wrote in message ... Hi everyone, I'm new to this forum and new to gardening! I wonder if you could offer some advice? First, this is NOT a forum, it is a newsgroup. Unfortunately I do not have ay experence with flowers as I only grow stuff to eat, so cannot help you with that one, but I'm sure some of the other contributors to this newsgroup will be able to give you reliable advise. Alan |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
New to forum - question about roses
On Mon, 14 Dec 2009 alan.holmes wrote:
I'm new to this forum and new to gardening! I wonder if you could offer some advice? First, this is NOT a forum, it is a newsgroup. That's a bit unkind to a first time poster, Alan, and a trivial distinction. As it says in the definition on Wikipedia: "Early Internet forums could be described as a web version of a newsgroup or electronic mailing list (many of which were commonly called Usenet); allowing people to post messages and comment on other messages." I mention it only because I seem to remember you were even more unkind to me on my first post in this forum (sic) back in 1995. Be NICE to people then they won't have reason to take offence! :-) David -- David Rance writing from Caversham, Reading, UK http://rance.org.uk |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
New to forum - question about roses
"David Rance" wrote in message ... On Mon, 14 Dec 2009 alan.holmes wrote: I'm new to this forum and new to gardening! I wonder if you could offer some advice? First, this is NOT a forum, it is a newsgroup. That's a bit unkind to a first time poster, Alan, and a trivial distinction. As it says in the definition on Wikipedia: Merely trying to put him right, which is vital to any post! Alan |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
New to forum - question about roses
On 14 Dec, 08:27, Edh78 wrote:
Hi everyone, I'm new to this forum and new to gardening! I wonder if you could offer some advice? I have just received a hybrid tea rose. I'm in the East Midlands and I'm wondering whether it is okay to plant it at this time of year? Should I start preparing the soil now to plant the rose in a few weeks time in mid-January? Or should I wait until March-April? If I need to wait until spring what should I do to take care of the plant in the meantime - how and where should I store it? Any advice would be much appreciated. Thanks very much. -- Edh78 Just get it planted asap. The bare root planting season runs from November to March - early April if you must, but watch the watering. I prefer to plant before Christmas if possible. The only thing that need stop you planting is hard frozen ground - a thin crust of frozen soil isn't a problem so long as you scrape that off and set it aside and you only put unfrozen soil back in. Correct planting depth is important - you will notice that your rose is a 'plant of 2 halves' The nobbly junction is the grafting union between the rootstock and the cultivated rose - that union needs to be a little below the surface after planting and firming in well (welly, not fingers please) Rod |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
New to forum - question about roses
Rod wrote:
On 14 Dec, 08:27, Edh78 wrote: Hi everyone, I'm new to this forum and new to gardening! I wonder if you could offer some advice? I have just received a hybrid tea rose. I'm in the East Midlands and I'm wondering whether it is okay to plant it at this time of year? Should I start preparing the soil now to plant the rose in a few weeks time in mid-January? Or should I wait until March-April? If I need to wait until spring what should I do to take care of the plant in the meantime - how and where should I store it? Any advice would be much appreciated. Thanks very much. -- Edh78 Just get it planted asap. The bare root planting season runs from November to March - early April if you must, but watch the watering. I prefer to plant before Christmas if possible. The only thing that need stop you planting is hard frozen ground - a thin crust of frozen soil isn't a problem so long as you scrape that off and set it aside and you only put unfrozen soil back in. Correct planting depth is important - you will notice that your rose is a 'plant of 2 halves' The nobbly junction is the grafting union between the rootstock and the cultivated rose - that union needs to be a little below the surface after planting and firming in well (welly, not fingers please) I planted a quince a couple of weeks ago. I'd bought a family tree the previous year, having asked a nursery if they had a Charles Ross. The only one they had was on this uncheap family tree, along with Discovery and James Grieve. I went along with this as James Grieve isn't the worst aople in the world, though Discovery might be just runner-up to Golden Disasterous. Thinks I - 'I'll have that off and graft on something decent next year.' Dicovery showed, Jame Grieve did too, but where there should have bee apples about the size of a small planet - Worcesters... So, as compensation for a year wasted, and no Charles Ross, they offered a refund. I suggested that as I had a perfectly sound tree to graft onto, they might just replace the Charles Ross bit. They didn't have a Charles Ross, so I suggested a quince, which I duly collected. I didn't expect it to be about nine feet in its container, though. It was fun getting it the fourteen miles home on the bus,,, -- Rusty |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
new pond and fishkeeping forum looking for new members | United Kingdom | |||
OT Thanks for the forum -- was: Lifting our forum@ | United Kingdom | |||
New Garden Forum from the UK...!! | United Kingdom | |||
New Garden Forum...!! | North Carolina | |||
New Garden Forum... PLAIN TEXT;o) | Australia |