If you went to the trouble of buying and planting high-grade roses at the beginning of the year, you have some good-looking rose blossoms on your hands. It would be a shame not to get a long life from ...
Roses are ideal cut flowers. The best time to cut them is just as the buds are starting to open. Few garden flowers make better cut-flower choices than the rose, and June is the peak month to cut them ...
Lightly pruning roses in fall helps protect them from wind, snow, and ice. Prune in mid-to-late fall. Use clean, sharp tools to remove diseased or dead wood and shorten tall canes. Avoid heavy pruning ...
Prune Knockout roses heavily in late winter or early spring as new growth begins. Lightly deadhead and shape in late summer, stopping two months before frost. For annual pruning, cut back one-third of ...
Learning to prune roses perfectly is a little like learning how to bake bread. It takes practice but over the years, you figure out how to do it just right. And even when it's not perfect, it's still ...
The time to take cuttings is approaching. Donald Adams of Oak Island tells us when and how to take cuttings: After frost and cold temperatures end the flowering season for the beautiful Confederate ...
Heavier pruning of roses is usually done in late winter or early spring, when the plant is dormant. However, lightly pruning roses in summer is also beneficial to help manage disease, encourage more ...
Cooler nights are closing in, and the window to shape healthy growth is shrinking. A few careful cuts now will pay off. September hands gardeners a short, decisive spell to guide plants through winter ...
There are plenty of gardening jobs that need to be done before spring begins, but taking a few moments to tend to roses in February will help them become healthy and strong. Monty Don, an expert ...