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Moonraker 04-06-2011 11:27 AM

Rock rose information
 
I have a number of rock roses, that are now large clumps and flowering
prolifically. The flowers are starting to die off, now normally I would
dead head them but this is impossible because of the quantity of
flowers. Two years ago I pruned one of the plants back the result was an
awful looking plant, though it did recover to give a good show this
year. How should I treat them? Also are they easy to propagate, as they
must surely after three years becoming to the end of their life cycle?
--
Residing on low ground in North Staffordshire

kay 04-06-2011 07:26 PM

Cistus are mainly the big shrub rockroses, aren't they? I assumed, from the reference to "clumps" that the OP meant Helianthemum, the little ones about 8 inches high, with huge quantities of flowers about 2cm across in shades of white, yellow, red and pink. Same family, so I imagine pruning is much the same.

If it's the little ones we're talking about, there's no point in dead heading. The flowers are short lived, and the plants just produces a succession of them. Dead heading won't encourage the plant to produce any more.

They will certainly carry on for a lot longer than three years, jest spreading and getting larger and larger. I had one for well over 10 years, which had to be removed because we got rid of the bit of wall it was living on.

They are fairly easy from seed.

Moonraker 05-06-2011 12:50 PM

Rock rose information
 
On 05/06/2011 08:03, Chris Hogg wrote:
On Sat, 4 Jun 2011 18:26:30 +0000, kay
wrote:


'Sacha[_4_ Wrote:
;925592']On 2011-06-04 11:27:58 +0100, Moonraker
said:
-
I have a number of rock roses, that are now large clumps and flowering

prolifically. The flowers are starting to die off, now normally I would

dead head them but this is impossible because of the quantity of
flowers. Two years ago I pruned one of the plants back the result was
an awful looking plant, though it did recover to give a good show this

year. How should I treat them? Also are they easy to propagate, as they

must surely after three years becoming to the end of their life
cycle?-

Cistus prefer to be trimmed to shape, rather than heavily pruned.
Propagate them with soft wood cuttings in early autumn, says my guru.
-


Cistus are mainly the big shrub rockroses, aren't they? I assumed, from
the reference to "clumps" that the OP meant Helianthemum, the little
ones about 8 inches high, with huge quantities of flowers about 2cm
across in shades of white, yellow, red and pink. Same family, so I
imagine pruning is much the same.

If it's the little ones we're talking about, there's no point in dead
heading. The flowers are short lived, and the plants just produces a
succession of them. Dead heading won't encourage the plant to produce
any more.

They will certainly carry on for a lot longer than three years, jest
spreading and getting larger and larger. I had one for well over 10
years, which had to be removed because we got rid of the bit of wall it
was living on.

They are fairly easy from seed.


I go over my helianthemums with the shears when they get leggy and
straggly. They shoot again very willingly from the bare exposed stems.
IME cistus don't like being pruned.

Sorry folk, they are indeed Cistus, why do we need these awkward Latin
names? I get confuse the same way over medicines, you get the same
prescription from the doctors with different names but actually the same
product.

--
Residing on low ground in North Staffordshire


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