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Landscaping Your Garden 

For planting roses a good garden loam with organic matter is
important. It must contain peat moss, leaf mold, compost,
rotted or commercial manure, and the bed should be prepared
as far ahead of planting as is feasible in order to allow
for settling of the soil.

Fall is the best time for setting out roses, but you can
plant in spring. When they arrive from the nursery, plant at
once. If they have dried en route, soak the roots and put
the tops in a bucket of water before planting. Trim back any
roots that are weak, long or broken at this time. Dig a hole
that is wide enough to allow the roots to spread without
crowding.

The rose is properly placed when the bud (the point where
the top joins the roots) is just under the ground surface.
Space hybrid teas about 18 inches apart in any direction.
Prune the branches 6 to 10 inches from the soil.

To grow good roses it is necessary to cultivate, to prune
and to spray. If you have a well-cultivated bed you need not
worry about watering. But if you start to water in hot
weather, you must keep it up, soaking the roots thoroughly
about once a week.

Spraying every 10 days guards against the diseases and
insects that attack roses. Nicotine sulphate wipes out the
green lice; arsenate of lead is used against chewing
insects; or sulphur and arsenate of lead may be used in a
dust, as may DDT dust.

Winterize your roses by mounding sod around them after the
first frost, or mulch with straw and evergreens. In cold
parts of the country, remove the supports from the climbing
roses and place the canes on the ground, peg them, and cover
with soil mounds.

In spring, cut back your roses to within 6 inches of the
ground. Ruthlessly lop off all but three or four canes on
hybrid teas. This pruning will give you strong plants. When
your plants grow out from spring pruning, you will have to
disbud, cutting off all the buds except the top ones on the
cane. This is the way to grow large blossoms.

by Paul Curran

More Gardening Tips, Ideas & Advice

Trees & Shrubs

Best Trees for Growing in Lawns

Planting Or Transplanting A Tree

Types Of Shrub To Use In Your Garden

More Types Of Shrubs To Use In Your Garden

How To Use Hedges In Landscaping 

Planting And Care Of Shrubs

 

Roses

How To Plant Rose Bushes In Your Garden 

Pruning Roses

Rose Garden Tips

Types of Roses To Use For Landscaping Your Home

 

Perennials, Annuals, & Bulbs

How To Use Flower Beds In Landscaping Your Garden

How To Use Biennials & Perennials In Your Garden

How To Use Annuals In Landscaping Your Garden

Growing Daffodils

Five Perennials For Shade Gardens 

Lawn Care

Lawn Care Tips

Fall Lawn Care 

Organic Lawn Care 

 

Other

Horticultural Therapy

How To Use Vines In Landscaping Your Home

The Many Types of Yellow Water Lilies

Starting a Shade Garden

Rid Your Garden of Slugs 

 

Koi Ponds

Designing & Building a Koi Pond

Koi Health

Koi Water Quality

Koi Parasites

Koi Bacterial Infections

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