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Gardening > Rose Garden > Re: Rose prunin...
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Re: Rose pruning dilemma

by "Gail Futoran" <futoran@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jul 25, 2007 at 02:48 PM

"chasnewbie" <chasnewbie.11cf5a2@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message 
news:chasnewbie.11cf5a2@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Hi There,
>
> As you can see from my login name, I'm pretty new to gardening in
> general and roses in particular and have a problem I hope someone 
> can
> help with.
>
> We have inherited a couple of rose trees (the best way to describe
> them) from the previous owners of our house. The problem is, they've
> been left to their own devices and have subsequently become very 
> tall
> and thin, approximately 8 or 9 feet. At the business end of each, 
> there
> are a lot of great blooms but I'd ideally like to cut them right 
> back
> and start from scratch to get a bush rather than a tree.
>
> I don't think I'd have a problem if there were various stems 
> dividing
> from the base but, rather like a tree, it's almost trunk-like and 
> there
> are no divisons for the first three feet or so. I've a feeling that 
> if i
> cut it back to where I'd like (almost soil level) I'd kill it and
> pruning back to where the stem begins to divide just wouldn't look
> right.
>
> In a nutshell, is it possible to cut right back, or do I just cut my
> losses and remove it and plane something else?

The usual advice is, when in doubt, cut
back some canes, see what happens,
cut more.  I.e., without knowing exactly
what kind of rose it is, it's impossible
to give specific advice.  With that height,
it's either a climber or some sort of old
garden rose.  They have different
pruning requirements from their smaller
cousins.  With a climber, you're better
off cutting a few canes down as far as
you can, but leaving other canes as is
and training them onto some sort of
structure, like a trellis.

Alternatively, you can in effect turn
a climber into a bush, if that's what you
want.  I don't know what that would do
to the blooming.  Before I knew much
about roses, I over-pruned three roses
that were young climbers and they never
recovered.  They make so-so shrub roses.
But I don't know if all climbers (or old
garden roses) would respond the same way.

If you live near a botanical garden that has
roses, or a nursery with a knowledgeable
staff, you might take a cutting with a bloom
on it to see if they have any idea what it
might be.

Gail
near San Antonio TX USA Zone 8
 




 5 Posts in Topic:
Rose pruning dilemma
chasnewbie <chasnewbie  2007-07-25 10:33:51 
Re: Rose pruning dilemma
"Gail Futoran"   2007-07-25 14:48:42 
Re: Rose pruning dilemma
"GreenieLeBrun"  2007-07-26 08:45:13 
Re: Rose pruning dilemma
chasnewbie <chasnewbie  2007-07-27 08:49:16 
Re: Rose pruning dilemma
"Gail Futoran"   2007-07-30 14:26:01 

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tan12V112 Mon Dec 1 17:55:51 CST 2008.