My son gave my Mom a little rose bush from school when he was in kindergarten. My Dad planted it in front of their house. He is 40 and the rose bush is beautiful! A year and half ago we bought a house and moved my parents in because of health problems. It was a fast, we have to do this right now thing. During the move my Daddy was in the hospital not expecting to make it, kidney failure, one of the things he made sure I got was the rose bush. I did and planted it in front of our house. He did come home but passed three months later the day after Thanksgiving, a year ago. My Momma, five months ago. I’m so worried about the rose bush dying and that is how I found your video. Thank you for your help. God bless…
There are 3 rose bushes on my moms property she asked me to cut back, dig up and toss out... but my Dad passed 1 year ago today and has grown roses my whole life. He was an Army guy, biker, construction worker... but loved the challenge, therapeutic value, and gift giving ability of Roses... so videos like yours have helped me keep them alive AND learn why my dad loved em so much! Thank you sir!
We have a "Rosa Peace" in our garden. It was started in a large pot that we used as a "unity candle" in our wedding. Instead of lighting a single candle from two, we took dirt from two different pots in the ceremony and put it together in the one with this rose in it. This beauty had blossomed right along side our marriage. It has been a tremendous gift. Last year we put it into the ground and it really took off. This will be the first year I am pruning it. I cannot wait until next season. It went through 5 different blooms this summer. Thanks for the tips!
Hi buddy. My dad passed away on August 11th. He was my lifelong hero. I’ve been devastated. For some reason, I started buying rose cuttings and trying to get them to root to heal my heart. The more time I spend on them, the more my heart gets filled. I have no idea how this makes any sense, but it does. It’s been a process but some are starting to bloom and develop roots. Thought I’d share this as you seem to be a good guy.
My daddy had red roses on his casket. Red roses have been my favorite rose since then. I get where you’re coming from, and my sympathies for your loss.
Similarly, I was part of the federal recovery & identification team at the 9/11 Flt.93 tragedy in Shanksville, Pa. A 9/11 rose with a white stripe on the innermost pedal was developed & dedicated to the Heroes of Flight 93. We have had 2 of these bushes since 2002 and they have survived in spite of us. Your guidance makes sense and I am sure you have given our roses a new lease on life. Thank you. Warren T.
We have a rose that is 30 yrs old. It is very special. I also have a funny story about a peach tree. My ex wife used to love peaches and she got one at wal mart and ate it on the way home. About the time we arrived home she was finished and just tossed it out the window. Now we have a huge peach tree next to the car. LOL. It is been growing there somewhere between 15- 20 yrs.
Right before my husband and I got married we purchased a beautiful acre of land that is backed up to state forest near Warwick NY. It needed a lot of TLC, but we cleaned it up and got married right there on the mossy beds just bordering our land. During the middle of the ceremony we planted a golden dawn sequoia tree that we randomly found at a local nursery and had all of our loved ones help cover it with soil. That was only 3 years ago but gosh do we love and care for that tree. Then when our blessing of a daughter came into the world we planted rose bushes in her honor along the front edge of our property (that's why I am watching this video now!) Love grows strong up in our neck of the woods, lol!
Well right now I got some pink & purple roses I'm growing on my property. The Pink roses is a baby bush right now but seeing all that you done & using the mulch which I already got since I work at Home Depot I wanna make sure they grow bigger next season. As for my purple roses I got those from a nursery for Mother's Day for my fiance. I just took them out the pot & rooted them in the ground. I amazed at how it adapted from outside the pot to the ground so fast. So for the late spring early summer I just kept watched on them just to make sure they were growing right. Now this fall I was thinking about wrapping a plastic bag over them after the mulching but then again they might not get no fresh air but just too moisture & that can cause some mold. So after watching what u did I will not go forward with my silly idea but use your idea instead which makes more sense. Thanks for sharing.
My step mother in law just passed away. She love and cared for a rose bush that has been in my husband's family for over 40 years. I just put it in my backyard. I pruned it and am going to try to grow little roses from the clippings. Wish me luck. Any advice is welcome. Thank you for this video.it helped know how to shape ours.
Mom, with the same style rose, would prune all the way back to the ground ... and those stubborn and onery roses (multiple years of training) would grow right back up to 4+ feet in the spring ... N WA West Coast.
Same up here in OR/PNW. I have some roses that I prune to a few inches off the ground and they come up chest high on me by the end of the season....and I'm 5'9.
I cannot recall if my mother ever did that, but it is possible that she did and I just never noticed. Could I bring myself to doing that? Eek... I am not sure.
You are down in Zone 5b - 7b, and a lot (seemingly) warmer in the South in winter from the Gulf warm air moderating a majority of the cold Alberta winds that come down off the high Midwest Plains. Here .in coastal Pac NW Zone 7a-9b, you would think we would be warmer than you in winter. But we get both the offshore freezing ocean winds, as well as the Alaskan-Yukon winds coming down the coast. We have freeze- your-butt-tight weather. We clip the roses (at least my experience) after the first frost, when the bush is dormant (and some branches are dead). That then stores up any nutrients in the roots, with snow on top, that in spring go hells bells with all new cellular growth in fast growing branches, than trying to wake up old and cranky vines with new juices. And the more that you continue to annually prune the bush, the more tall (and extremely) straight branches you will get. Then with all these straight branches, you could go into a bush prune, cutting off the growing tip hormones, and it should then start re-branching off these, making for a fuller bush rose. But that is our climate here.
Hi I’ve heard you don’t leave the rose clippings near the nose because they can make the rose plant sick .. is that not true? Also isn’t fertilizingin fall going to stimulate growth? Thanks
We've had snow weeks ago where I live yet my roses are still flowering with new buds, my instinct says cut them off so it saves it's energy for summer blooms but they're too beautiful to chop off! I don't know why it's flowering, I haven't fertilized it since the summer.
Well, your soil may already have the nutrients the plant needs. I would be concerned about cutting while it is below freezing - I would expect for the cut end to get a lot of cold damage and perhaps introduce a disease into the plant.
J&J Acres Thanks for the advice, I've kept them on and the flowers are opening up nicely. They're really growing well despite freezing temperatures for over a month!
Well, no. However, it typically is never cold in October. This year has just been warmer than average with very few dips down into "cool" weather. The national weather service is forecasting a warmer and drier than usual winter in our area.
My son gave my Mom a little rose bush from school when he was in kindergarten. My Dad planted it in front of their house. He is 40 and the rose bush is beautiful! A year and half ago we bought a house and moved my parents in because of health problems. It was a fast, we have to do this right now thing. During the move my Daddy was in the hospital not expecting to make it, kidney failure, one of the things he made sure I got was the rose bush. I did and planted it in front of our house. He did come home but passed three months later the day after Thanksgiving, a year ago. My Momma, five months ago. I’m so worried about the rose bush dying and that is how I found your video. Thank you for your help. God bless…
There are 3 rose bushes on my moms property she asked me to cut back, dig up and toss out... but my Dad passed 1 year ago today and has grown roses my whole life. He was an Army guy, biker, construction worker... but loved the challenge, therapeutic value, and gift giving ability of Roses... so videos like yours have helped me keep them alive AND learn why my dad loved em so much! Thank you sir!
We have a "Rosa Peace" in our garden. It was started in a large pot that we used as a "unity candle" in our wedding. Instead of lighting a single candle from two, we took dirt from two different pots in the ceremony and put it together in the one with this rose in it. This beauty had blossomed right along side our marriage. It has been a tremendous gift. Last year we put it into the ground and it really took off. This will be the first year I am pruning it. I cannot wait until next season. It went through 5 different blooms this summer. Thanks for the tips!
Hi buddy. My dad passed away on August 11th. He was my lifelong hero. I’ve been devastated. For some reason, I started buying rose cuttings and trying to get them to root to heal my heart. The more time I spend on them, the more my heart gets filled. I have no idea how this makes any sense, but it does. It’s been a process but some are starting to bloom and develop roots. Thought I’d share this as you seem to be a good guy.
My daddy had red roses on his casket. Red roses have been my favorite rose since then. I get where you’re coming from, and my sympathies for your loss.
Thank you so much for sharing!
Similarly, I was part of the federal recovery & identification team at the 9/11 Flt.93 tragedy in Shanksville, Pa. A 9/11 rose with a white stripe on the innermost pedal was developed & dedicated to the Heroes of Flight 93. We have had 2 of these bushes since 2002 and they have survived in spite of us. Your guidance makes sense and I am sure you have given our roses a new lease on life. Thank you.
Warren T.
Hey mate keep your chin up it gets not as hard
We have a rose that is 30 yrs old. It is very special. I also have a funny story about a peach tree. My ex wife used to love peaches and she got one at wal mart and ate it on the way home. About the time we arrived home she was finished and just tossed it out the window. Now we have a huge peach tree next to the car. LOL. It is been growing there somewhere between 15- 20 yrs.
Right before my husband and I got married we purchased a beautiful acre of land that is backed up to state forest near Warwick NY. It needed a lot of TLC, but we cleaned it up and got married right there on the mossy beds just bordering our land. During the middle of the ceremony we planted a golden dawn sequoia tree that we randomly found at a local nursery and had all of our loved ones help cover it with soil. That was only 3 years ago but gosh do we love and care for that tree. Then when our blessing of a daughter came into the world we planted rose bushes in her honor along the front edge of our property (that's why I am watching this video now!) Love grows strong up in our neck of the woods, lol!
Well right now I got some pink & purple roses I'm growing on my property. The Pink roses is a baby bush right now but seeing all that you done & using the mulch which I already got since I work at Home Depot I wanna make sure they grow bigger next season. As for my purple roses I got those from a nursery for Mother's Day for my fiance. I just took them out the pot & rooted them in the ground. I amazed at how it adapted from outside the pot to the ground so fast. So for the late spring early summer I just kept watched on them just to make sure they were growing right. Now this fall I was thinking about wrapping a plastic bag over them after the mulching but then again they might not get no fresh air but just too moisture & that can cause some mold. So after watching what u did I will not go forward with my silly idea but use your idea instead which makes more sense. Thanks for sharing.
This is my first time seeing this channel and I'm so moved❤ I just needed advice on roses but I got an extra good vibes boost for free😀🙌
My step mother in law just passed away. She love and cared for a rose bush that has been in my husband's family for over 40 years. I just put it in my backyard. I pruned it and am going to try to grow little roses from the clippings. Wish me luck. Any advice is welcome. Thank you for this video.it helped know how to shape ours.
Thank you
Bless you doggie❤️
I have a tommytoe tomato plant that's has re grown for the past five years every year she comes back it's wonderful
Mom, with the same style rose, would prune all the way back to the ground ... and those stubborn and onery roses (multiple years of training) would grow right back up to 4+ feet in the spring ... N WA West Coast.
Same up here in OR/PNW. I have some roses that I prune to a few inches off the ground and they come up chest high on me by the end of the season....and I'm 5'9.
I cannot recall if my mother ever did that, but it is possible that she did and I just never noticed. Could I bring myself to doing that? Eek... I am not sure.
You are down in Zone 5b - 7b, and a lot (seemingly) warmer in the South in winter from the Gulf warm air moderating a majority of the cold Alberta winds that come down off the high Midwest Plains. Here .in coastal Pac NW Zone 7a-9b, you would think we would be warmer than you in winter. But we get both the offshore freezing ocean winds, as well as the Alaskan-Yukon winds coming down the coast. We have freeze- your-butt-tight weather. We clip the roses (at least my experience) after the first frost, when the bush is dormant (and some branches are dead). That then stores up any nutrients in the roots, with snow on top, that in spring go hells bells with all new cellular growth in fast growing branches, than trying to wake up old and cranky vines with new juices. And the more that you continue to annually prune the bush, the more tall (and extremely) straight branches you will get. Then with all these straight branches, you could go into a bush prune, cutting off the growing tip hormones, and it should then start re-branching off these, making for a fuller bush rose. But that is our climate here.
Thanx a bunch! Great Vide. May I keep my grandiflora roses in their container outside during the cold winter?
Beautiful and very informative video , thank you!
thank you for the tips
Thank you for watching!
Great teaching video! Thank you!
You are very welcome
Great video very helpful
With so much mulch...wouldn't that cause fungicide or spores to grow.?
Moisture?
Bless you, doggy. LOL
Sometimes you just have to sneeze!
Hi I’ve heard you don’t leave the rose clippings near the nose because they can make the rose plant sick .. is that not true?
Also isn’t fertilizingin fall going to stimulate growth?
Thanks
Thanks for this video...Very informative!
Informative video! Thanks for the knowledge!
👍
Roses love beer. Save last drop for them
Thanks! for info🌸🌼🌺
So pretty..
Thank you!
We've had snow weeks ago where I live yet my roses are still flowering with new buds, my instinct says cut them off so it saves it's energy for summer blooms but they're too beautiful to chop off! I don't know why it's flowering, I haven't fertilized it since the summer.
Well, your soil may already have the nutrients the plant needs. I would be concerned about cutting while it is below freezing - I would expect for the cut end to get a lot of cold damage and perhaps introduce a disease into the plant.
J&J Acres Thanks for the advice, I've kept them on and the flowers are opening up nicely. They're really growing well despite freezing temperatures for over a month!
Is it always this hot in October?
Well, no. However, it typically is never cold in October. This year has just been warmer than average with very few dips down into "cool" weather. The national weather service is forecasting a warmer and drier than usual winter in our area.