This is crazy!! I have nothing to gain from telling you this but I assure you, I have rooted roses from bouquet roses more than once! I have also re-potted and re-planted rooted roses from my bouquets into my garden, so I'm sorry to say YOU ARE SIMPLY WRONG. You can absolutely grow roots and plants from roses you have received! You're info is nuts, and anyone who wants to try them should give it a go!
Sorry, I deleted your last reply by mistake. My statement based on science and personal experience, yours based on personal beliefs. I did a lot of research before I made this video. Most roses sold today are grafted and/or result of genetic engineering therefore its impossible to grow identical roses from cuttings but if your roses are natural variety and grow on the own roots you can grow them from cuttings.
@@Classyflowers Nothing seems to be deleted, so no worries. I guess you could say my statement is based on personal belief, because I believe what I see with my own eyes. I have the plants, and they are doing well! What more can I say. It costs nothing to try.
I just got into rose growing and so far I have 20 rose plants that all where cuttings from a $10 bouquet. I use aloe vera as a rooting agent and it has proved 95 percent successful.
I just received 12 roses to mark our anniversary and while I am still enjoying the blooms (5 days) already, I am determined I will try to grow them. It will not be a waste of time to try for some things we value deeply. Your video is very discouraging and stifling. (Singapore viewer)
I’m literally growing store bought roses right now as we speak and they are growing, all 8 cuttings are growing leaves now in a pot covered with a plastic humid bag.
You can grow these roses. They may not come out true due to their origin as a grafted variety, but it is possible to grow. After cutting off all leaves and keeping 4-6 buds, soak the cuttings in warm water for a day (add few drops of peroxide if you have), rinse with a mild bleach solution and let them dry for few hours, and then place those in a mix of perlite and seed starting mix. Cover with a plastic bag, or place a water bottle over it after making a couple of holes for air. In 2-3 weeks some of those cuttings will root. You can also graft cut roses on a bush rose.
Theworld... Seems like a good process! Any process that works is awesome! I'm unfamiliar with a few of your steps, but there's more than one way to skin a cat, right? I typically leave 2 leaves on the stem (the top 2 leaves of my cutting) to necessary nutrients to help keep the stem healthy as it produces roots. As for keeping 4-6 buds, do you happen to mean leaf nodes? For anyone who may not know, leaf nodes are the "bumps" on the stem where the leaves were removed. Roots tend to be generated from the cells at a leaf node of a plant, so you want at least one node under the surface when you plant the stem cutting. I often use sand and a reasonably good soil as my growing medium, but seed starting mix is always a safe bet! Perlite is great too! I don't soak the stems before planting them, but I do water the sand and soil mix very well, allowing it to drain well before planting anything in it. This helps to keep the stem cutting moist, and also generates the humidity you're trying to achieve by covering the cutting with a plastic bag or water bottle. I also use a misting bottle to make sure those 2 leaves (on top) remain moist. I'm not familiar with the bleaching and drying process you mentioned. Do you know the purpose of that? I'm so curious. I do use a hormone powder (because I always have it on hand) but lots of people propagate plants without that, so I guess that's just a preference. A couple of holes in the bag or bottle for the flow of air, and you're set. Probably the hardest part of all is leaving the cutting alone... alone, alone. The only time you'll lift the cover (bag, bottle) is to mist the cuttings to keep them hydrated, but you really have to be disciplined NOT to "test" the cutting by tugging on them. In my experience, 5-6 weeks is probably a more realistic timeframe for root growth when I've propagated, but there are many factors that enter into it. You're fortunate to see results so quickly. Congrats! Anyone who tries this will likely see some new growth on the stem in anywhere from 5-10 days, but don't let that fool you. That doesn't automatically mean there are forming roots. Only remove the stems from the medium if the stem has turned black and the black is heading up the stem. Ultimately that tells you the stem has rotted before rooting, and that's a bummer. I always suggest propagating at least three stems when you do this so you have a little room for error. Remember, lightly mist the stem cuttings once a day, twice if it's really hot in your area. Keep the stem cuttings in a space that is either shady or dappled with sunlight. Definitly NOT full sun! Also, propagation requires patience, so hang in there, and ignore the desire to pull on your stems to check for root growth. You don't want to continually break or tear what may be starting to develop. It's very exciting when you see new growth appearing. Hope these additional instructions are helpful for someone!
Technically if you buy the rose its yours. You cannot be sued for regrowing and selling something you have purchased. U less they make you sign a contract on every purchase. Otherwise you can grow and sell whatever you want. Also rose companies are so huge it would be hard for them to track you down unless your selling nationwide .
What the HECK!!! Does this have to do with prorogation of a cut rose ughhh some of you people need to either title your videos correctly or get off stop wasting peoples time!!!!!!
People try it yourselves … so many people told me certain plants would not grow in my region 🤣 HUGE MYTH every time someone doubts that I can plant something I plant it without telling them and enjoy it myself 🥲 it’s called experimenting. Many times I’ve take cuttings before I have had success. Don’t give up… keep trying and you will succeed. HAPPY PLANTING MAKE THE PLANET GREEN
Temperature also has a grand effect on cuttings working or not. If you are in a colder climate then a heating mat would do you well. the preferred temp for cuttings is around 70-75 degrees. I used to live in Boston and even in the summer rose cuttings and other plant cuttings would often fail, or take really long to root. I now live in Texas and everything I cut, fully roots and very fast. I got a bundle of 7 rose colors from my local flower shop and they have all taken after a week and a half. You can try a plastic bin from home depot (along w heating mat for colder climates) and turn it upside down. Place all the cuttings on the lid and fill the lid with small layer of water, and place the bottom of the bin on top upside down for holding the humidity. Another tip for people trying to propagate in colder, drier climates, is to make sure to cut the leaves on the cutting either off or in half to reduce loss of water.
Well i just planted 200 cuttings of bouquet roses of various colors under my tree today and yesterday in pots with rooting hormone because i get alll the old rose bouquets my grocery store throws out in the trash whenever i want. So i have unlimited access to these. If i remember, i'll update ya'll when they start growing roots, and we'll see the success rate out of 200 :D
I tried to root a Freedom rose from a bouquet that I bought at a Publix. The roses were shipped in from Ecuador. Ironically shoots actually started growing from roses started in soil and roses started in water. Fungal disease conquered all twelve of the cuttings. I imagine maybe I could have grafted it. A month later I bought a Mr. Lincoln rose which looked identical to the Freedom rose. It was bare root and blooming three months later. Ironically the Mr. Lincoln bare root was five dollars cheaper than the bouquet. There is still an allure to conquer the feat of rooting a bouquet rose though. Great video, you are accurate in why you cannot root a bouquet rose.
Thank you for the very informative video as it has cleared my mind as to why I don't seem to succeed in rooting the rose bouquet. I have tried uncountable times but only one which rooted and later die back. Thank you
Oh my...I've killed so many roses--even the grafted ones would die on me but the wild rose bottom would put out new growth. So I have a few shrubs of those. :). Any tips for getting regular roses to root or climbers/ramblers?
My mom was given roses a friend bought from Safeway a week or so ago. All 3 are growing rose buds from the stems and there are probably 5 on each! You're definitely wrong.
If I was going to buy cut roses this vid changed my mind . Her roses look plastic and have no scent and she called single or double roses which are fragrant cabbage roses
I say, thanks for giving me the information to be educated. I occasionally receive cut flowers as gifts and would prefer to be able to grow them. I have attempted to root some before and was unsuccessful. I consider this video to be a time- and heartbreak-saver.
@@Classyflowers LOL your video is nonsense. I grown hundreds of roses from cuttings. Roses are actually way more hardy on their own roots. Roses are grafted to speed up their growth, not because they can not be grown on their own roots.
Are you in the business of growing and selling flowers? Did you make this video to discourage people and sell your roses? Are all these comments from people just lies? Or you are the one who's lying? Are going to accidentally delete my comment, too?
@@macdaddynick1751 Of course, commercially produced flowers are cloned for their beauty, to be the same kind of beauty, the same exact copy of beauty... even the thorns and leaves are the same exact replicate of genes hahaha. It's all business, right? I just commented about sterility becoz the video talks about how it would be next to impossible to grow roots from cloned sterile roses.. 😊
First , I must say that you know a great deal about the cut rose market. You are correct in your honest and informed opinion that it is difficult, but not impossible. I have been propagating roses for almost a decade. My success rate on commercial stems is about 20% . I have found better success with rose stems from a local florist, then from grocery stores. If conditions are perfect, they will root. I will give you and your viewers a bit of advice that will dramatically increase success rates. Callus the cutting some, before placing in the growing medium. One started under lights, humidity high. It's slow, difficult, but so rewarding. And boy, do you learn the meaning of patients. Good luck. It's no myth.
©hardened by life. ©softened by roses
True patience!!
What does "callus the cutting some" mean please
@@nickiemmy9177 letting it callous over / dry out a little
@@isaiah4478 Thanks so much for explaining 😊
Fact check yes
This is crazy!! I have nothing to gain from telling you this but I assure you, I have rooted roses from bouquet roses more than once! I have also re-potted and re-planted rooted roses from my bouquets into my garden, so I'm sorry to say YOU ARE SIMPLY WRONG. You can absolutely grow roots and plants from roses you have received! You're info is nuts, and anyone who wants to try them should give it a go!
Do you know difference between grafted roses and own-root roses? Have you rooted and planted a grafted rose or own-root rose?
Sorry, I deleted your last reply by mistake. My statement based on science and personal experience, yours based on personal beliefs. I did a lot of research before I made this video. Most roses sold today are grafted and/or result of genetic engineering therefore its impossible to grow identical roses from cuttings but if your roses are natural variety and grow on the own roots you can grow them from cuttings.
@@Classyflowers Nothing seems to be deleted, so no worries. I guess you could say my statement is based on personal belief, because I believe what I see with my own eyes. I have the plants, and they are doing well! What more can I say. It costs nothing to try.
i am sorry too to tell you...even i tried under ...favourable conditions....i never root them
@@andyhlawnchhing8337 Hmm... since I was able to root them, I'm not sure why you're "sorry to tell me" that it didn't work out for you?
I just got into rose growing and so far I have 20 rose plants that all where cuttings from a $10 bouquet. I use aloe vera as a rooting agent and it has proved 95 percent successful.
How do you use the aloevera? Just cut open an aloe leaf , apply it onto the rose cutting and place it in a medium?
@@iniyaraj5665 yah, about
I just received 12 roses to mark our anniversary and while I am still enjoying the blooms (5 days) already, I am determined I will try to grow them. It will not be a waste of time to try for some things we value deeply. Your video is very discouraging and stifling. (Singapore viewer)
I’m literally growing store bought roses right now as we speak and they are growing, all 8 cuttings are growing leaves now in a pot covered with a plastic humid bag.
You can grow these roses. They may not come out true due to their origin as a grafted variety, but it is possible to grow. After cutting off all leaves and keeping 4-6 buds, soak the cuttings in warm water for a day (add few drops of peroxide if you have), rinse with a mild bleach solution and let them dry for few hours, and then place those in a mix of perlite and seed starting mix. Cover with a plastic bag, or place a water bottle over it after making a couple of holes for air. In 2-3 weeks some of those cuttings will root.
You can also graft cut roses on a bush rose.
Do you soak the entire cutting or only the tip where you want the roots in warm water?
Theworld... Seems like a good process! Any process that works is awesome! I'm unfamiliar with a few of your steps, but there's more than one way to skin a cat, right? I typically leave 2 leaves on the stem (the top 2 leaves of my cutting) to necessary nutrients to help keep the stem healthy as it produces roots. As for keeping 4-6 buds, do you happen to mean leaf nodes? For anyone who may not know, leaf nodes are the "bumps" on the stem where the leaves were removed. Roots tend to be generated from the cells at a leaf node of a plant, so you want at least one node under the surface when you plant the stem cutting. I often use sand and a reasonably good soil as my growing medium, but seed starting mix is always a safe bet! Perlite is great too! I don't soak the stems before planting them, but I do water the sand and soil mix very well, allowing it to drain well before planting anything in it. This helps to keep the stem cutting moist, and also generates the humidity you're trying to achieve by covering the cutting with a plastic bag or water bottle. I also use a misting bottle to make sure those 2 leaves (on top) remain moist. I'm not familiar with the bleaching and drying process you mentioned. Do you know the purpose of that? I'm so curious. I do use a hormone powder (because I always have it on hand) but lots of people propagate plants without that, so I guess that's just a preference. A couple of holes in the bag or bottle for the flow of air, and you're set. Probably the hardest part of all is leaving the cutting alone... alone, alone. The only time you'll lift the cover (bag, bottle) is to mist the cuttings to keep them hydrated, but you really have to be disciplined NOT to "test" the cutting by tugging on them. In my experience, 5-6 weeks is probably a more realistic timeframe for root growth when I've propagated, but there are many factors that enter into it. You're fortunate to see results so quickly. Congrats! Anyone who tries this will likely see some new growth on the stem in anywhere from 5-10 days, but don't let that fool you. That doesn't automatically mean there are forming roots. Only remove the stems from the medium if the stem has turned black and the black is heading up the stem. Ultimately that tells you the stem has rotted before rooting, and that's a bummer. I always suggest propagating at least three stems when you do this so you have a little room for error. Remember, lightly mist the stem cuttings once a day, twice if it's really hot in your area. Keep the stem cuttings in a space that is either shady or dappled with sunlight. Definitly NOT full sun! Also, propagation requires patience, so hang in there, and ignore the desire to pull on your stems to check for root growth. You don't want to continually break or tear what may be starting to develop. It's very exciting when you see new growth appearing. Hope these additional instructions are helpful for someone!
Technically if you buy the rose its yours. You cannot be sued for regrowing and selling something you have purchased. U less they make you sign a contract on every purchase. Otherwise you can grow and sell whatever you want. Also rose companies are so huge it would be hard for them to track you down unless your selling nationwide .
It’s illegal though depending on the variety
@@isaiah4478 not illegal you're not going to jail for it it's just something someone can sue for even though that's ridiculous
What if they grow little leaves days after you put them in water?
Mine did
There are roses you can grow from cuttings like that. My friend tried and she succeed. I'm gonna try too.
That was quite educational and informative . . The secrets of the Retail Rose Revealed!
You can grow roses from cuttings I have done it 23 times
Lol..really
Why are you saying "ugly forms such as cabbage roses" I don't understand. I think they look pretty. Am I missing something?
She is so negative lol.
You diffinitely can grow from those. Especially when you give full of love and attention. If you give positive attention to it it will grow.
she really dragged cabbage roses for no reason😂
I never have success with using rooting powder, but I am ALWAYS successful with getting my store bought roses to root. 🤷♀️
Do you have a tutorial video about that?
Me too I’ve done it with bouquets and not just the flowers, the leaves and grasses too
Hope you don't mind sharing the method of getting them to root
@@myredeemerlivesamen991 I put mines in water by the windows and it takes a month
What the HECK!!! Does this have to do with prorogation of a cut rose ughhh some of you people need to either title your videos correctly or get off stop wasting peoples time!!!!!!
People try it yourselves … so many people told me certain plants would not grow in my region 🤣 HUGE MYTH every time someone doubts that I can plant something I plant it without telling them and enjoy it myself 🥲 it’s called experimenting. Many times I’ve take cuttings before I have had success. Don’t give up… keep trying and you will succeed. HAPPY PLANTING MAKE THE PLANET GREEN
Gene modification and abnormalities, toxic chemicals are not going to help to keep our planet green. Good luck with your experiments.
Temperature also has a grand effect on cuttings working or not. If you are in a colder climate then a heating mat would do you well. the preferred temp for cuttings is around 70-75 degrees. I used to live in Boston and even in the summer rose cuttings and other plant cuttings would often fail, or take really long to root. I now live in Texas and everything I cut, fully roots and very fast. I got a bundle of 7 rose colors from my local flower shop and they have all taken after a week and a half. You can try a plastic bin from home depot (along w heating mat for colder climates) and turn it upside down. Place all the cuttings on the lid and fill the lid with small layer of water, and place the bottom of the bin on top upside down for holding the humidity. Another tip for people trying to propagate in colder, drier climates, is to make sure to cut the leaves on the cutting either off or in half to reduce loss of water.
The roses are lovely. So very pretty, and hard to get going.
You really can grow them from the bouquet. Have grown 7 roses so far.
Have they survive at least one winter?
VERY VERY GOOD INFORMATION....EVEN THOUGH I TRY TONS OF TIMES EVEN IN THE MOST FAVOURABLE conditions...
THEY NEVER MAKE IT
Well i just planted 200 cuttings of bouquet roses of various colors under my tree today and yesterday in pots with rooting hormone because i get alll the old rose bouquets my grocery store throws out in the trash whenever i want. So i have unlimited access to these. If i remember, i'll update ya'll when they start growing roots, and we'll see the success rate out of 200 :D
I hope so
Any update yet? I realize it can take 6 weeks so possibly not.
Any update?
wonderful video that confirmed what I learned from trying....Thank you...
It works you just need more stems and work the numbers game not all will root but some will
Can we re grow bouquet roses at home in our garden
Great Talk! But i’m still going to try... perhaps with the Law of Attraction, it will grow. Besides my roses wont come from Ecuador or Colombia.
Best of luck!
I tried to root a Freedom rose from a bouquet that I bought at a Publix. The roses were shipped in from Ecuador. Ironically shoots actually started growing from roses started in soil and roses started in water. Fungal disease conquered all twelve of the cuttings. I imagine maybe I could have grafted it. A month later I bought a Mr. Lincoln rose which looked identical to the Freedom rose. It was bare root and blooming three months later. Ironically the Mr. Lincoln bare root was five dollars cheaper than the bouquet. There is still an allure to conquer the feat of rooting a bouquet rose though. Great video, you are accurate in why you cannot root a bouquet rose.
Thank you for the very informative video as it has cleared my mind as to why I don't seem to succeed in rooting the rose bouquet. I have tried uncountable times but only one which rooted and later die back. Thank you
Very informative!Thank you!
Fascinating
Well I've just done some cuttings from a bunch of roses and if ya make a propagator or buy one they root easily
Oh my...I've killed so many roses--even the grafted ones would die on me but the wild rose bottom would put out new growth. So I have a few shrubs of those. :). Any tips for getting regular roses to root or climbers/ramblers?
Take the node bud and graft it on wild rose
I want 1 box roses
My mom was given roses a friend bought from Safeway a week or so ago. All 3 are growing rose buds from the stems and there are probably 5 on each! You're definitely wrong.
I forgot to add that we are propagating them right now
Good luck
Maybe I won't be successful but I have heard of others having success. I'll keep you posted!
The reason why I wouldn’t try to grow cut roses is that I find them unappealing. But nothing stops you trying .
If I was going to buy cut roses this vid changed my mind . Her roses look plastic and have no scent and she called single or double roses which are fragrant cabbage roses
Informative but very Negative. If you dont want to help your fellow growers don't post videos at all
I want to help my fellow growers not to be fooled by "positive" UA-cam bloggers. If "negative" means truthful I am "negative".
I say, thanks for giving me the information to be educated. I occasionally receive cut flowers as gifts and would prefer to be able to grow them. I have attempted to root some before and was unsuccessful. I consider this video to be a time- and heartbreak-saver.
@@Classyflowers LOL your video is nonsense. I grown hundreds of roses from cuttings. Roses are actually way more hardy on their own roots. Roses are grafted to speed up their growth, not because they can not be grown on their own roots.
Please educate yourself and learn more about roses here: bangladeshbiosafety.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Biology_of_Rose_Au.pdf
Hahaha, nice try
Are you in the business of growing and selling flowers? Did you make this video to discourage people and sell your roses? Are all these comments from people just lies? Or you are the one who's lying? Are going to accidentally delete my comment, too?
Yes you can because there is still life in the stem.
“Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.” Albert Einstein
Wow, very interesting.. so it is genetic modified roses and are sterile..
It doesn’t matter if they are sterile. Cloning doesn’t care about the sterility. :)
@@macdaddynick1751 Of course, commercially produced flowers are cloned for their beauty, to be the same kind of beauty, the same exact copy of beauty... even the thorns and leaves are the same exact replicate of genes hahaha. It's all business, right? I just commented about sterility becoz the video talks about how it would be next to impossible to grow roots from cloned sterile roses.. 😊
To much bla bla bla
Lol this whole video is total nonsense and garbage. Roses most definitely can be grown from cuttings. I have grown hundreds of them.