Thanks so much for this video! We had been given seeds in memory of a loved one and the conventional growing instructions just weren’t working! Now I have 2 little rose plants thanks to this video :)
I'm glad I found your video. I had no idea that rose seeds took so long to sprout. I have about 50 seeds in the fridge that have been there for a month. I can already see a difference. Im excited to see how many plants I get out of them.
The world could use more people like you, giving some of your time to help spread your wealth of knowledge and experience you've gained in life to help others be able to learn and enjoy . I am planning to start the process tomorrow. I'd like to check back here to share my experience and to also show appreciation 👍
I'm attempting this for the first time and found your videos quite helpful - they are well-paced and provide clear instructions on what to do. Thanks for putting the time and effort into making these!
Thanks for your video explaining how to grow rose from seeds. My husband picked up the rose hip from a park garden (orange looking kind, don’t know the name of the rose bush). Should I wait till November to stratification them in the fridge or I can do it now? It is Oct 17 in MD. Our spring starts about 3rd week in March. Thanks.
Squeeee! I have five little tiny rose plants! I winter sowed some and they all sprouted! I can’t thank you enough. I can hardly wait to see what colors they become!
I’ve never done this and the video just started, but you don’t know yet what they flowers are like? Are any still with us? Hope it went well and I loved the little squeak at the beginning of your comment.
Wow. I didn’t know roses had such a process to start growing. And I didn’t know it took that long to grow! That’s crazy. Right now I’m growing sunflowers. One day I might do roses
Wow it did work but mine took 6 months in the fridge before it germinated Oct to April. Now i just hope and pray they grow once I put the germinated seeds in their 1st tiny home. Thank you very much for sharing how to grow them from seedlings. Mine came from a yellow rose.
My first group of rose seeds that I stratified started sprouting! There are a few more left, but wanted them to sprout a little more. The others I put in small peat pot trays so I can get at least first leaves. Not even a week and they started to grow rather quickly. I just have to find room once they get a little bigger and then transplant them into plastic planters that you use. Nothing yet from my other group of seeds, but at least got some using the methods you provided.
Thank you Jason! Excellent commentary ! I’m growing DouxiE Rose seeds exactly to your specifications. First time so I’ll keep you posted. Thank you Christine 🌹
I just moved into a house on a beautiful lot and I noticed ripening rose hips on bushes around the house. I'm going to use your video to hopefully grow more! :)
A lot to go through, I will try it, but I rather pay the gardeners what they deserve to buy a mature plant instead. Thank you Jason for explaining step by step, you are the best!
@@rockybernard2997 Yes! And they also trial the plants for growth characteristics, disease resistance, and performance in a variety of different climates. It can be many years before a "winner" is brought to market. Amazing, isn't it?
Thanks for this video.. I have been keeping seeds in the fridge in a paper towel and popped them into potting soil after a good 3 months. They then Took 3 months plus to germinate . Never thought of doing it this way. Thank you again. Going to give it a bash.
Love your video! Collected 2 bottle shaped hips from a ? Species rose growing in a state park here in Vermont. I plan to try your method. It was growing in the shade, in the mountains, on the side of a ditch but had obviously bloomed💪. That’s a rose worth having whatever it is.
Thanks a lot for the detailed video, all the germination process was a lot to retain when I read it. But watching it here in steps really helps us understand it a lot better. I’m trying it now!
Hi Jason, thank you for the video. been binge watching your channel. Anyway, pardon my ignorance, but do you wet the soil where you put your germinated seeds? I don't have green house, can I just cover the seedling trays with bottles or containers? Or just leave them out under direct sunlight? Thanks heaps!
Hi thankyou for the video... I admired a rose bush over a garden fence for a good few years now and I never saw the owner to ask what it is .. the colour is a beautiful deep pink cerise... And the frangrace is devine... I longed for this rose 🌹...then last autumn a hip fell over the fence and I couldn't believe my eyes! So .. I have it in the fridge and I'm going to see to it very soon!! Thankyou from England 🙏🌹
Sure. Be sure to have them out from the rose hip and just covered in some potting soil, sand or vermiculite to maintain some moisture. The only other thing about outside is critters (bird, mice, etc) can mess with your seed tray. I like the fridge so I can be sure about my results, but outside is fine too.
Hi, I thought your video was very informative, and thank you. I do have a few questions. When the seedling is in the refrigerator and covered in that Tupperware container do you water it again, after a few days or a week? What did you have in the pot when you transferred the germinated seeds into? It looked like moss? And do you water that? and how often? Thanks again looking forward to your advice.
I don't add much water to the seeds while chilling. I check them every couple of weeks, but they rarely need additional moisture. Once transplanted (I think in this video I was using a composted bark/wood fiber mix) you can check for water every couple of days.
On spot advice here. Thank you. But i believe that the stratification time can be shortened to 3 weeks if you take the risk of loosing some of your seeds.
Hey Jason... Great stuff mate! I'm down in the far reaches of the world in Tasmania watching this on a Sunday afternoon ... I have the rose bug too and I'm afraid there's no remedy!! I had my first success of sprouting stratified lilac seeds this year for the first time.. so hearing about the rose seed process gives me hope of success. Your video is just a textbook UA-cam video. Looking forward to seeing more progress videos from your tutorials. One question- not sure if you have any thoughts on this one- When looking at a rose plant do you think that the size of the rose hips indicates a potential cross pollinated rose...on the beautiful rose I plucked the hips from, most hips were a similar size, but there were just two that were almost double the size...?
Thanks Loko. I hadn't considered the size of the rose hips as an indication of the pollen parent, and now you've got me wondering. I'll have to check the rose hybridizer's forum to see if they've got the answer.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Cool! Thanks a lot. Please post some more update vids when you can. Always worth a watch. Cheers and happy rose-ing... haha if that's a thing.. :)
You mentioned soaking seeds from a previous year, could you elaborate on that more? I have a rose bush in my yard of the place I am renting and it has seed pods from last year. How long should I soak them before trying to stratify them? P. S. Hello from Squamish.
I usually soak for 1 day (2 is fine as well) - then stratify for 8 to 12 wks. Nice to hear from you in Squamish - I'll be up there to visit your local garden club on the 17th.
I am going to attempt to have a go, just to try for my own garden, if it is possible your comments will give me more confidence in doing so, all the best from kieron
Pretty cool! I forgot my rose seeds this year. I did however germinate some seeds from trees. Those are doing fine. Some already came up. The rest i need to plant them ASAP or its to late.... Nice video!
At 8:26 were these germinated seeds straight from the fridge? Or had they been sitting outside the fridge for a while? And at 9:00 what is that soil medium? Also are the seedlings watered after transplanting?
Thanks and best of luck with your rose growing. I probably should tell you in advance that the seeds sold online are not likely to look like the pictures in the listing (more likely they'll just be pink or white) but I wish you success just the same.
Thanks. I do cuttings mostly, because it maintains the exceptional genetic qualities of the donor plant. Any time you propagate from seed, there's variability in the offspring. I don'd mind that for the species roses (R. rugosa, R. glauca, etc.) but for named varieties, cuttings are the way to go.
I appreciate so much how you say the year and sometimes even the month when you are doing the videos especially now since the publish dates aren't being shown. I don't know why UA-cam started doing that but it is annoying to me especially plant videos when people say it's time to plant now and there is no date when video was published. I usually go through the comments and see oldest comment date and sort of get an idea but it really is bad when the video creator has a contest or other promotion they talk about and come to find out it was years before and no longer an event they do.
QUESTION: What was the soil type you planted the seedings in? Is there a special kind to use? Thank you for your information. I am for sure going to be trying your method with my rose hips. :) Hapoy Growing ~Shaina~
First off you have done a great presentation on this video. I have bought some blue dragon roses and some ocean wave roses. I bought them off Etsy. Do you know anything about these hybrids?
Hi William. Thank you! Sadly, a lot of the "rare" rose seed varieties sold on E-Bay, Amazon and Etsy are marketed with photoshop fake pictures. If any clear shade of blue is involved, you can be sure it isn't true. Here's a vid I did on the topic: ua-cam.com/video/dcvegffDFXs/v-deo.html They may still germinate, but are likely the plain pink or white rugosa rose.
I found your video very informative, and as i'm no real "Green Thumb" i'm going to try your methods, especially your other video! Thank You for sharing this valuable information! :)
I am trying raising roses for the first time from seed this year (2021). I followed your video and hope by the end of April to see some germination. I used a couple of containers to help spread out the number of seeds that I had, and put them in the frig. I am expecting a couple other kind of rose seeds in the next couple of weeks and will set them up the same way.
Hey Jason, I’m just so interested in growing plants this year and I’m just starting this process but I have some questions.... 1. Is it a must to use the vermiculite or perlite to grow the seeds or can you use soils like potting soil or nursery starting soil? 2. Once you put your seeds in the fridge after planting how many times to you water the seeds or no watering at all. Thank you
You can use potting soil no problem - just try to make it not too damp. Just moist enough for the seeds to "feel" it. You can check every couple of weeks if you want, but I find that in a sealed container or bag, the medium remains wet enough without supplemental watering.
The frame at 9:58 has two sprouting tupperware containers and the one on the right seems to have white powder sprinkled on the top. What is the white powder?
Hi Dottie. Both tupperware containers have white plastic tags with the variety name - the one on the right is buried a bit in vermiculite, making it look like a white powder. Thanks for watching!
Hello, is this process applicable to all kinds of rose seeds? Would you know if roses from tropical countries (only rainy and sunny seasons) grow with this process? I watched this video twice already by the way. 🤣
Awesome Video! I don't have a fridge, but I do live in the mountains of Mexico & rainy season is starting. Can I leave them outside or no sun? & possibly in my cabin?
I have a seedling from a mini rose bush that I planted, from seed, in early May, and it's now the end of June. It has 1 bud on it, but not tons of leafy growth. Is that normal?
thanks so much i have had great success with your method just one question , as i am in South Africa my small plants are only around 3 month old and we are now @ the start of spring and they want to start flowering so should i leave them or break the buds off?
I'd probably let them bloom out just to get an initial impression of color & form. Just remember that the earliest flowers will also have fewer petals than the variety at maturity.
I followed your tips and I have managed to germinate rose seeds 😊. When I put theSeedlings into growing medium, do you water them afterwards? I noticed in the video you didn't? Where do you leave them in the spring, in shade?
Hi Jason. I am just venturing into roses. I am particularly interested in roses that are native to the U.S. (I live in Mississippi). I ordered some seeds of Rosa virginiana. I was just wondering if you had experience with that species, or other native species, and whether in your experience there are any significant differences between native and cultivated species in terms of how one should go about raising them from seed. Thanks!
Thanks for your detailed video. I am here in The tropical Island of Mauritius, should I go by the same process, as our winter are not below 18°C ? Thanks for replying.
Hi Ali, yes - I suggest you cold stratify the seeds for 3 months or so before warming them to germinate. This has worked for a wide variety of rose species and hybrids for me - even teas and "subtropical" roses.
I never grew rose seeds before and was just only growing fruits and vegetables from seeds and I figured I had to just switch it up to growing flowers. I normally soak the seeds for 20 hrs in potassium nitrate before I plant my pepper seeds. I wonder if this method will work for flower seeds? I am thinking of growing them for everyone including me just for fun under a 600-2000 watt blue/red grow light. I wonder if there’s a way to germinate the rose seed in less than 3 weeks like in 2 week or less which ever is the best method for you. Thanks 🙏🏼 to the Fraser Valley Farm and Others!! ❤️😁
Hi Fraser..very wonderful n informative vdo. I m a regular viewer of yr vdos. I too hv collected some rose hips fm my garden n shortly going to follow yr steps. But 1 thing I wd like to clear b4 putting in fridge .. cn v add mycelium fungi to d seeds so that the outer coats of d seeds get thiner n germinate fast ? Kindly reply, waiting eagerly.
Thanks a lot for sharing. A bit surprised that you got a big plant in one year. Did you added fertilizer? Also, do you get roses as big and same color as the mother plants?
Hello, I really enjoy your UA-cam rose channel. So, thank you!. I try to follow it consistently. I even was successful in propagating from soft wood. I have a question about growing roses from seeds that you posted a couple of. My question is very simple: once I go through the different steps to the blooming stage, do I get the true rose flower as the one from the seed mother? Thank you in advance for answering
Not necessarily. Most modern hybrids are complex crosses of very different varieties. A seed can grow up to have characteristics like the mom, or quite different (like some previous generation of ancestor).
Hi Troy. Cuttings by far. I only use seed prop for a few of the species roses (rugosa, rubrifolia, spinosissima) for sale, where doing large batches makes financial sense. The techniques will be handy if I can squeeze out some time to attempt breeding roses.
Wonderful, helpful information as always. Quick question- if I harvest hips in January ( instead of November) could I shorten the stratification in the fridge? Thanks!
It seems the seeds don't begin to "feel" the stratification until they're inside the hips. Time held on the shrub during winter doesn't appear to count.
My rose seedling has its 2nd set of leaves already and is about 1 inch tall when should I start feeding it? Its February so I can't bring it outside yet its under grow lights now. Thanks for your videos.
Thank you so much for the tutorial! What should I do if mine don’t start sprouting in the fridge after many months? I think its been 3 or 4 months and no sign of germination sadly. I was thinking of going ahead and planting the seeds but maybe I should continue the stratification? Thanks so much!
Not every batch of seeds is fertile. I'd probably go ahead and plant them out to see if warmth now triggers germination. Some people will go with a 2 month cycle of warmth and then repeat the cold treatment, but it's all about how much trouble you think it's worth.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you for your reply. I am concerned about fungal growth, is there anyway to prevent this? Also, is the germination period for roses 3 months? I am growing red ones.
It is April 14, 2023. We had a very wet winter here in Central California. My front yard is bordered by a large variety of roses. I had my gardeners hold back on mowing, as it didn't really need it and there were plenty of other things to attend to. I'm so glad that I had them wait, as I have noticed baby roses sprouting up all over my yard from rose hips. They are now 4-8 inches in height, with tons of leaves. I have encircled them with rocks/bricks so that they don't get mowed over. This has been so fun. I'm so curious to see what their blooms will look like. I have no idea who the parents are, lol, as there are so many different varieties. The summers here get quite hot (up to 116 degrees last year), so I am afraid of them burning as the weather warms. Should I just leave them alone for now and transplant when they are more established? Please let me know what to do Jason.
I purchased sun-dried rose hips from our local grocery store. The package says no additives all natural. No sulfur or any inhibitors. the seeds are inside the hips I've extracted many of them and the seeds look great. Would you happen to have any suggestions on germinating? The country of origin is the Kyrgyz Republic. I checked for roses native to Kyrgyz republic and this is what I found
I have followed the steps described here and kept the container in the refrigerator for 3 months. But, I can't see any germination yet. Should I bring out the containers from the refrigerator? What should I do next? Where should I keep them?
Thanks for all the helpful work you do on your channel, Jason. Question: once the seeds have germinated and transplanted, do the pots go in direct sunlight?
I see no harm in trying. Species roses can be difficult to get crosses from (because they may have different chromosome counts than modern hybrids) - but sometimes they'll find a way to hybridize anyway.
Thanks so much for this video! We had been given seeds in memory of a loved one and the conventional growing instructions just weren’t working! Now I have 2 little rose plants thanks to this video :)
So happy to hear about your success!
⁰p9p9pp000
@@FraserValleyRoseFarmhave you ever seen/grown green or seafoam blue roses?
I'm glad I found your video. I had no idea that rose seeds took so long to sprout. I have about 50 seeds in the fridge that have been there for a month. I can already see a difference. Im excited to see how many plants I get out of them.
How many germinated, I’ll love to know
The world could use more people like you, giving some of your time to help spread your wealth of knowledge and experience you've gained in life to help others be able to learn and enjoy . I am planning to start the process tomorrow. I'd like to check back here to share my experience and to also show appreciation 👍
I'm attempting this for the first time and found your videos quite helpful - they are well-paced and provide clear instructions on what to do. Thanks for putting the time and effort into making these!
My pleasure Joshua
Thanks for your video explaining how to grow rose from seeds. My husband picked up the rose hip from a park garden (orange looking kind, don’t know the name of the rose bush). Should I wait till November to stratification them in the fridge or I can do it now? It is Oct 17 in MD. Our spring starts about 3rd week in March. Thanks.
Squeeee! I have five little tiny rose plants! I winter sowed some and they all sprouted! I can’t thank you enough. I can hardly wait to see what colors they become!
Very exciting!
I’ve never done this and the video just started, but you don’t know yet what they flowers are like? Are any still with us? Hope it went well and I loved the little squeak at the beginning of your comment.
Thanks for this information, now I know more than I used to.
Wow. I didn’t know roses had such a process to start growing. And I didn’t know it took that long to grow! That’s crazy. Right now I’m growing sunflowers. One day I might do roses
Thanks Joshua. Best luck with your sunflowers!
Sunflowers are fun to grow n there’s so many varieties of them
Wow it did work but mine took 6 months in the fridge before it germinated Oct to April. Now i just hope and pray they grow once I put the germinated seeds in their 1st tiny home. Thank you very much for sharing how to grow them from seedlings. Mine came from a yellow rose.
My first group of rose seeds that I stratified started sprouting! There are a few more left, but wanted them to sprout a little more. The others I put in small peat pot trays so I can get at least first leaves. Not even a week and they started to grow rather quickly. I just have to find room once they get a little bigger and then transplant them into plastic planters that you use. Nothing yet from my other group of seeds, but at least got some using the methods you provided.
Thank you Jason! Excellent commentary ! I’m growing DouxiE Rose seeds exactly to your specifications. First time so I’ll keep you posted. Thank you Christine 🌹
I just moved into a house on a beautiful lot and I noticed ripening rose hips on bushes around the house. I'm going to use your video to hopefully grow more! :)
Good luck
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm After following your tips, I now have germinated seeds to plant!
Oh wow I would have never thought of getting seeds from my roses❤
i use perlite and peat moss and 10 % sand..mix well with little water..your plants look great!
A lot to go through, I will try it, but I rather pay the gardeners what they deserve to buy a mature plant instead. Thank you Jason for explaining step by step, you are the best!
sure makes you appreciate the dedication required to coax such beautiful roses -and roses seldom disappoint on the beauty scale... TY!
For sure. Many props to the breeders - who do this thousands of times over to find a few promising seedlings.
you mean to tell me, they let each seedling bloom and flower to be able to discriminate which one is a keeper?
@@rockybernard2997 Yes! And they also trial the plants for growth characteristics, disease resistance, and performance in a variety of different climates. It can be many years before a "winner" is brought to market. Amazing, isn't it?
I very happy that i got to this video , cause i was watching the fake one, but i show your video exposing fake one, then i come to this 😊 thank you ..
I found your video really helpful. Well paced, plenty of important detail, nice flow through the whole process. Thanks!
Thanks for this video.. I have been keeping seeds in the fridge in a paper towel and popped them into potting soil after a good 3 months. They then Took 3 months plus to germinate . Never thought of doing it this way. Thank you again. Going to give it a bash.
Thank you I found this very interesting, I will try with my grandson to follow your video.
Lot's of expertise involved in growing roses! What a unique process, and very beautiful indeed
Love your video! Collected 2 bottle shaped hips from a ? Species rose growing in a state park here in Vermont. I plan to try your method. It was growing in the shade, in the mountains, on the side of a ditch but had obviously bloomed💪. That’s a rose worth having whatever it is.
Nice. Rosa moyesii has urn-shaped hips too
Thanks a lot for the detailed video, all the germination process was a lot to retain when I read it. But watching it here in steps really helps us understand it a lot better. I’m trying it now!
Hi Jason, thank you for the video. been binge watching your channel. Anyway, pardon my ignorance, but do you wet the soil where you put your germinated seeds? I don't have green house, can I just cover the seedling trays with bottles or containers? Or just leave them out under direct sunlight? Thanks heaps!
I put my rose seeds in the fridge and a few of them are starting to germinate
I’m so excited 🌹
Nicely done!
Is now(end of April in Seattle) an ok time to start stratification? Can they be outside in the shade in summer after germination?
Thank you for this video! Would it also work to plant the seeds in the fall and have them go through an actual winter outside?
Hi thankyou for the video... I admired a rose bush over a garden fence for a good few years now and I never saw the owner to ask what it is .. the colour is a beautiful deep pink cerise... And the frangrace is devine... I longed for this rose 🌹...then last autumn a hip fell over the fence and I couldn't believe my eyes! So .. I have it in the fridge and I'm going to see to it very soon!! Thankyou from England 🙏🌹
I have one sprouting!! Only one ! Fingers crossed 🤞
Can I just stratify the seeds outside where winter is on November, December and January? Your channel is awesome❗️very lovely, thanks for sharing
Sure. Be sure to have them out from the rose hip and just covered in some potting soil, sand or vermiculite to maintain some moisture. The only other thing about outside is critters (bird, mice, etc) can mess with your seed tray. I like the fridge so I can be sure about my results, but outside is fine too.
Thanks! You're the best🌸🌼🌺
Yeah it’s a cooking show with pro mix soil beside you LOL great video by the way really educational and entertaining keep it up
Hi, I thought your video was very informative, and thank you. I do have a few questions. When the seedling is in the refrigerator and covered in that Tupperware container do you water it again, after a few days or a week? What did you have in the pot when you transferred the germinated seeds into? It looked like moss? And do you water that? and how often? Thanks again looking forward to your advice.
I don't add much water to the seeds while chilling. I check them every couple of weeks, but they rarely need additional moisture. Once transplanted (I think in this video I was using a composted bark/wood fiber mix) you can check for water every couple of days.
On spot advice here. Thank you. But i believe that the stratification time can be shortened to 3 weeks if you take the risk of loosing some of your seeds.
I love fragrant big rose blooms. But I want to see a video tutorial how to do a rose tree
Just train it to grow up & keep only the top growing
Pretty sure rose trees are a splice.
Whats fridge temperature
I have a rose tree and dead headed. I hope I did it right
Very lucid video. Points well explained. Kindly advise the plastic container is to be kept on the shelf of the fridge or in the freezer of the fridge
In the main compartment of the fridge - cool but not freezing
Hey Jason... Great stuff mate! I'm down in the far reaches of the world in Tasmania watching this on a Sunday afternoon ... I have the rose bug too and I'm afraid there's no remedy!! I had my first success of sprouting stratified lilac seeds this year for the first time.. so hearing about the rose seed process gives me hope of success. Your video is just a textbook UA-cam video. Looking forward to seeing more progress videos from your tutorials. One question- not sure if you have any thoughts on this one- When looking at a rose plant do you think that the size of the rose hips indicates a potential cross pollinated rose...on the beautiful rose I plucked the hips from, most hips were a similar size, but there were just two that were almost double the size...?
Thanks Loko. I hadn't considered the size of the rose hips as an indication of the pollen parent, and now you've got me wondering. I'll have to check the rose hybridizer's forum to see if they've got the answer.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Cool! Thanks a lot. Please post some more update vids when you can. Always worth a watch. Cheers and happy rose-ing... haha if that's a thing.. :)
Thank you. Im watching from Poland. All the best!
You mentioned soaking seeds from a previous year, could you elaborate on that more? I have a rose bush in my yard of the place I am renting and it has seed pods from last year. How long should I soak them before trying to stratify them?
P. S. Hello from Squamish.
I usually soak for 1 day (2 is fine as well) - then stratify for 8 to 12 wks. Nice to hear from you in Squamish - I'll be up there to visit your local garden club on the 17th.
What about I just left them indoor instead of refrigerator?
I am going to attempt to have a go, just to try for my own garden, if it is possible your comments will give me more confidence in doing so, all the best from kieron
Pretty cool! I forgot my rose seeds this year. I did however germinate some seeds from trees. Those are doing fine. Some already came up. The rest i need to plant them ASAP or its to late....
Nice video!
Great follow-up on your kousa seeds. Wonderful instruction and results! Thanks.
At 8:26 were these germinated seeds straight from the fridge? Or had they been sitting outside the fridge for a while? And at 9:00 what is that soil medium? Also are the seedlings watered after transplanting?
Straight from the fridge. I use a composted bark mix and yes water after transplant
i just bought purple/black rose seeds i appreciate your info because i really dont want to mess this up i want a different rose no one saw before :D
Thanks and best of luck with your rose growing. I probably should tell you in advance that the seeds sold online are not likely to look like the pictures in the listing (more likely they'll just be pink or white) but I wish you success just the same.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm lets see what happens. i can give bad review if not similiar
Seeds or cuttings? Is one better than the other? I have just planted my frist roseplant. I have already learned so much from your videos. Thank you 🙂🌷
Thanks. I do cuttings mostly, because it maintains the exceptional genetic qualities of the donor plant. Any time you propagate from seed, there's variability in the offspring. I don'd mind that for the species roses (R. rugosa, R. glauca, etc.) but for named varieties, cuttings are the way to go.
Thank you sir for sharing this video, now I know that roses have seeds and now I know how to grow my seeds..I have my seeds now that I bought online
Where would you suggest buying a variety of rose seeds online?
I bought some from Georgia Vines. Sheffields has them too, I think. But mainly, I collect locally.
I appreciate so much how you say the year and sometimes even the month when you are doing the videos especially now since the publish dates aren't being shown. I don't know why UA-cam started doing that but it is annoying to me especially plant videos when people say it's time to plant now and there is no date when video was published. I usually go through the comments and see oldest comment date and sort of get an idea but it really is bad when the video creator has a contest or other promotion they talk about and come to find out it was years before and no longer an event they do.
QUESTION: What was the soil type you planted the seedings in? Is there a special kind to use?
Thank you for your information. I am for sure going to be trying your method with my rose hips. :)
Hapoy Growing ~Shaina~
It's a local potting mix made mainly from composted bark. Any reasonable potting soil will work.
We recently just moved house,and we have loads of rose hips..im definitely going to try this. Thank you for sharing..new subscriber over here💃💃
Best of luck Amanda.
I would like to see the process of how to make a rose tree. What kind of tree stock do you use to make a tree rose?
I'm trying it on R. multiflora f. inermis this year. I'm not all that experienced with grafting, but I may take a video of the attempt anyway. Thanks!
Wow! Great instructions. I see it takes real patience.
Sure does! Thanks
First off you have done a great presentation on this video. I have bought some blue dragon roses and some ocean wave roses. I bought them off Etsy. Do you know anything about these hybrids?
Hi William. Thank you! Sadly, a lot of the "rare" rose seed varieties sold on E-Bay, Amazon and Etsy are marketed with photoshop fake pictures. If any clear shade of blue is involved, you can be sure it isn't true. Here's a vid I did on the topic: ua-cam.com/video/dcvegffDFXs/v-deo.html They may still germinate, but are likely the plain pink or white rugosa rose.
So many great ideas here! You’re a legend thanks for sharing your expertise! Allison from Tasmania
Very helpfu videol,,,,thank you!
I'm so excited to try this in my tropical country, the Philippines : )
I found your video very informative, and as i'm no real "Green Thumb" i'm going to try your methods, especially your other video!
Thank You for sharing this valuable information! :)
My pleasure. Best luck Mick!
Should you soak seeds before placing in vermiculite and for how long?
Not necessary. I only soak seeds if I need to remove them from a dried seed pod.
For how long should I soak the rose seeds before putting them into the vermiculite?
A few hours to overnight is fine.
Does the water have to be at certain temperature during the whole time of draining the seeds or does that not really matter?
I am trying raising roses for the first time from seed this year (2021). I followed your video and hope by the end of April to see some germination. I used a couple of containers to help spread out the number of seeds that I had, and put them in the frig. I am expecting a couple other kind of rose seeds in the next couple of weeks and will set them up the same way.
Good luck with your seedlings Joe!
Hey Jason, I’m just so interested in growing plants this year and I’m just starting this process but I have some questions....
1. Is it a must to use the vermiculite or perlite to grow the seeds or can you use soils like potting soil or nursery starting soil?
2. Once you put your seeds in the fridge after planting how many times to you water the seeds or no watering at all. Thank you
You can use potting soil no problem - just try to make it not too damp. Just moist enough for the seeds to "feel" it. You can check every couple of weeks if you want, but I find that in a sealed container or bag, the medium remains wet enough without supplemental watering.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm thanks a million
Great video Thank You! You've shared priceless valuable information. I'm trying this with free rosehips I've collected! So much fun!
The frame at 9:58 has two sprouting tupperware containers and the one on the right seems to have white powder sprinkled on the top. What is the white powder?
Hi Dottie. Both tupperware containers have white plastic tags with the variety name - the one on the right is buried a bit in vermiculite, making it look like a white powder. Thanks for watching!
Great video! Now I know better. The science behind it is crazy but makes sense. Thank you!
Hello, is this process applicable to all kinds of rose seeds? Would you know if roses from tropical countries (only rainy and sunny seasons) grow with this process? I watched this video twice already by the way. 🤣
Thanks - yes, the cold treatment is required even in warmer climates because the genetics of roses are mainly evolved from temperate regions.
Looking for video to how to sow rose seeds
Been lucky to have ur video
So descriptive, hope I would be able to grow my roses following these steps
Again, thank you my boo for the keep it simple minds like me : ) Very informative indeed!
Awesome Video! I don't have a fridge, but I do live in the mountains of Mexico & rainy season is starting. Can I leave them outside or no sun? & possibly in my cabin?
I am now in the process of unsubscribing to all those root roses in a banana videos, thanks to you.
HAHAHHAHA we all believed them once in our lives 😂😂 same here
I have a seedling from a mini rose bush that I planted, from seed, in early May, and it's now the end of June. It has 1 bud on it, but not tons of leafy growth. Is that normal?
Oh thank you for theinformation . I just ordered me som seed from Amazon. And anxious to learn this. I will be looking for your next video.
Great Information, Thank you, Cant wait to try the wild rose hip seeds I found.
thanks so much i have had great success with your method just one question , as i am in South Africa my small plants are only around 3 month old and we are now @ the start of spring and they want to start flowering so should i leave them or break the buds off?
I'd probably let them bloom out just to get an initial impression of color & form. Just remember that the earliest flowers will also have fewer petals than the variety at maturity.
Love your videos so much! Great, no nonsense, info!
Thank you for your detail instruction. Does it matter which compartment of the fridge you put the seed? Fruit draw, veggie draw? Thanks
No. They all have basically appropriate temperatures.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm thank you. I'm going to try.
I followed your tips and I have managed to germinate rose seeds 😊. When I put theSeedlings into growing medium, do you water them afterwards? I noticed in the video you didn't? Where do you leave them in the spring, in shade?
Hi Andrew. I'll probably have watered them in after the video! I do leavce them in semi-shade until I see strong growth and rooting
I have put my rose seeds in the fridge. Can you post a video on care after initial transplanting. Amount of water used and how often. Fertilizers?
Thank you very much as l am so eager to try to produce a healthy rose from a hip that l picked myself.
Great Video! Can't wait to put the seeds to stratify :)
Great video. I really your explanation of what happens in nature and how we're making that work on our schedule!
Hi Jason. I am just venturing into roses. I am particularly interested in roses that are native to the U.S. (I live in Mississippi). I ordered some seeds of Rosa virginiana. I was just wondering if you had experience with that species, or other native species, and whether in your experience there are any significant differences between native and cultivated species in terms of how one should go about raising them from seed. Thanks!
Good morning Jason very nice video and I found it very interesting I will come back later on with some questions thank you very much again
Thanks Samuel. Best of luck!
Thanks for your detailed video. I am here in The tropical Island of Mauritius, should I go by the same process, as our winter are not below 18°C ? Thanks for replying.
Hi Ali, yes - I suggest you cold stratify the seeds for 3 months or so before warming them to germinate. This has worked for a wide variety of rose species and hybrids for me - even teas and "subtropical" roses.
I never grew rose seeds before and was just only growing fruits and vegetables from seeds and I figured I had to just switch it up to growing flowers. I normally soak the seeds for 20 hrs in potassium nitrate before I plant my pepper seeds. I wonder if this method will work for flower seeds? I am thinking of growing them for everyone including me just for fun under a 600-2000 watt blue/red grow light. I wonder if there’s a way to germinate the rose seed in less than 3 weeks like in 2 week or less which ever is the best method for you. Thanks 🙏🏼 to the Fraser Valley Farm and Others!! ❤️😁
I get 300 red rose seeds in the mail by Thursday.😁
So cool. I found a beautiful rosa bandala today in Virginia. Ty google pics. I took a rose hip. Hoping to get a landrace rose
Hi, do you have air holes in that container so the mix can breath while in the fridge??
No, I've been using sealed containers
Hi Fraser..very wonderful n informative vdo. I m a regular viewer of yr vdos. I too hv collected some rose hips fm my garden n shortly going to follow yr steps. But 1 thing I wd like to clear b4 putting in fridge .. cn v add mycelium fungi to d seeds so that the outer coats of d seeds get thiner n germinate fast ? Kindly reply, waiting eagerly.
Hi Leena. I've never had to add any fungal inoculant to germinate my rose seeds.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm thanx
Thanks a lot for sharing.
A bit surprised that you got a big plant in one year.
Did you added fertilizer?
Also, do you get roses as big and same color as the mother plants?
Thanks Daniel. Yes, I potted an fertilized it along with my main rose crop (from cuttings). The color was much paler than the mother.
I am learning so I am just watching for now, Thank You !
Thanks Susan!
Thank you for the informative video! I am writing a paper on how to grow roses, and you gave a lot of good tips. (:
Hello, I really enjoy your UA-cam rose channel. So, thank you!. I try to follow it consistently. I even was successful in propagating from soft wood.
I have a question about growing roses from seeds that you posted a couple of.
My question is very simple: once I go through the different steps to the blooming stage, do I get the true rose flower as the one from the seed mother?
Thank you in advance for answering
Not necessarily. Most modern hybrids are complex crosses of very different varieties. A seed can grow up to have characteristics like the mom, or quite different (like some previous generation of ancestor).
Very helpful video. Apologies if you have answered this before. What is the potting mix you are potting on to? Cheers David
Hi David. It's a composted bark mix with shredded cedar fiber.
Thank you for teaching us how!
Great tutorial on growing roses from seed, but it seems to me that growing roses from cuttings is much easier. Which is your actual preferred method?
Hi Troy. Cuttings by far. I only use seed prop for a few of the species roses (rugosa, rubrifolia, spinosissima) for sale, where doing large batches makes financial sense. The techniques will be handy if I can squeeze out some time to attempt breeding roses.
Your videos are so helpful! Thank you
Wonderful, helpful information as always. Quick question- if I harvest hips in January ( instead of November) could I shorten the stratification in the fridge? Thanks!
It seems the seeds don't begin to "feel" the stratification until they're inside the hips. Time held on the shrub during winter doesn't appear to count.
My rose seedling has its 2nd set of leaves already and is about 1 inch tall when should I start feeding it? Its February so I can't bring it outside yet its under grow lights now. Thanks for your videos.
Thank you so much for the tutorial! What should I do if mine don’t start sprouting in the fridge after many months? I think its been 3 or 4 months and no sign of germination sadly. I was thinking of going ahead and planting the seeds but maybe I should continue the stratification? Thanks so much!
Not every batch of seeds is fertile. I'd probably go ahead and plant them out to see if warmth now triggers germination. Some people will go with a 2 month cycle of warmth and then repeat the cold treatment, but it's all about how much trouble you think it's worth.
Hey I have a question. Why do you have to put it in the fridge? Shouldn't it be warmer? I'm a new to botany and I have many questions.
This is what rose seeds need only for this stage - to convince them to germinate.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you for your reply. I am concerned about fungal growth, is there anyway to prevent this? Also, is the germination period for roses 3 months? I am growing red ones.
It is April 14, 2023. We had a very wet winter here in Central California. My front yard is bordered by a large variety of roses. I had my gardeners hold back on mowing, as it didn't really need it and there were plenty of other things to attend to. I'm so glad that I had them wait, as I have noticed baby roses sprouting up all over my yard from rose hips. They are now 4-8 inches in height, with tons of leaves. I have encircled them with rocks/bricks so that they don't get mowed over. This has been so fun. I'm so curious to see what their blooms will look like. I have no idea who the parents are, lol, as there are so many different varieties. The summers here get quite hot (up to 116 degrees last year), so I am afraid of them burning as the weather warms. Should I just leave them alone for now and transplant when they are more established? Please let me know what to do Jason.
Yes, I'd probably let them be until they've developed more roots
I purchased sun-dried rose hips from our local grocery store. The package says no additives all natural. No sulfur or any inhibitors. the seeds are inside the hips I've extracted many of them and the seeds look great. Would you happen to have any suggestions on germinating? The country of origin is the Kyrgyz Republic. I checked for roses native to Kyrgyz republic and this is what I found
THEY SELL THE HIPS FOR making/brewing tea
I have followed the steps described here and kept the container in the refrigerator for 3 months. But, I can't see any germination yet. Should I bring out the containers from the refrigerator? What should I do next? Where should I keep them?
Yes, I'd probably bring them out and try them with some warmth now. I hope the seeds are viable and sprout nicely for you!
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you so much.
Thanks for all the helpful work you do on your channel, Jason. Question: once the seeds have germinated and transplanted, do the pots go in direct sunlight?
A bit of light shade can be helpful in the first couple of weeks - just to give them an easy start
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you so much, Jason. I will do as you suggest!
Thank you for sharing very good video , like 4,4K . Good health and much success
I found some wild roses in California. Small blossoms, amazingly fragrant with small leaves and lanky branches. Can I cross this with a garden rose?
I see no harm in trying. Species roses can be difficult to get crosses from (because they may have different chromosome counts than modern hybrids) - but sometimes they'll find a way to hybridize anyway.