Growing Roses Is Easy With These Simple Tips

(ARA) – No other flower can evoke romance in the garden like a rose. As America’s favorite flower, roses can be found adorning homes in quaint coastal villages to rural farmlands, modern cities to quiet mountain retreats.

“Anybody can grow roses, no matter where they live. If you can grow grass, you can grow roses in your landscape,” says James A. Baggett, editor of Country Gardens Magazine.

Whether it’s a prize-winning hybrid tea rose you’re after, the rich colors of shrub roses sprinkled throughout your landscape or containers full of blooms on your deck or patio, with a little know-how, you’ll grow roses that are healthy and beautiful and that you can show off with pride.

Stress buster

It can happen to anyone. Even experienced rose enthusiasts have lost a favorite rose to stressors like powdery mildew, drought, or extreme summer heat.

Now science has come to the rescue to give your plants the fitness edge they need to keep healthy and strong – no matter what unpredictable heat spell, cold snap or disease should hit.

Easy Growing Roses
Easy Growing Roses

Whether you’re a beginner or a seasoned rose gardener, you can enjoy success with a good plant-strengthening spray like Jaz Rose Spray, new this spring.

This easy-to use, safe and biodegradable leaf spray was developed by plant scientists and endorsed by the American Rose Society.

Jaz Rose Spray (www.jazsprays.com) contains jasmonate, which naturally occurs in plants and helps to keep all roses strong and resistant to disease, pests, excessive heat, drought, cold and salt. It works by boosting your plant’s natural resistance to environmental stressors and encouraging vigorous roots, growth and blooms.

Simple tips from the experts

Renowned landscape designer Jon Carloftis plants shrub roses in containers. “I like to give them perfect planting conditions such as good drainage, rich soil and the addition of regular fertilizer that won’t be an overdose to neighboring plants,” he says.

Here are the basics for all those who are a bit rose-phobic and long for rosy success:

* Sunlight:  Provide your roses with direct sunlight for at least five to six hours each day.

* Soil:  Roses grow best in good soil with a pH ranging from 6.5 to 6.8. Till to a depth of two feet – adding a good organic compost or peat moss for healthy drainage.

* Location:  Don’t plant roses too close to shrubs or trees that will compete for water, light and nutrients. Provide them with adequate space for air circulation.

* Water: It’s best to water rose bushes twice a week, thoroughly at the base of the plant. Avoid late-evening watering that can foster powdery mildew. Instead, water early in the morning to allow the leaves to dry before nightfall.

* Fertilize: Fertilize roses every one to two months starting in the spring with balanced fertilizers containing nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium. Stop fertilizing in late summer or early fall to prepare them for dormancy.

* Drainage: Whether you grow them in containers or the ground, good drainage is necessary to prevent water from pooling at the roots. Improve drainage with tilling or raised beds and containers with drainage holes.

So grab a shovel and get digging in the dirt and get set to enjoy beautiful roses. To learn more about rose care from the experts and Jaz Rose Spray, visit www.jazsprays.com.

Courtesy of ARAcontent

Dave
Two Florida gardeners living in a sub-tropical paradise. Find us on Google+!

9 Comments

    1. Hi Winnie,
      Thanks for asking. Powdery mildew is a fungal disease. It can effect many different plants. Like most fungi, poor air circulation and high humidity promote growth. Some roses seem to be magnets for powdery mildew. And, it especially likes the younger leaves.
      As for the black spots…another fungus. Your best bet is to remove the infected leaves for either fungus and apply a good fungicide. Potassium deficiency in your roses can make back spot worse. Add sulphate of potash in spring, summer and autumn to the soil to avoid the deficiency.
      I’m not sure what is causing your leaves to turn yellow overnight. Is your plant getting enough water? Is it wilting from thirst? Many things can cause yellowing.
      Have you applied a well balance rose fertilizer? We have used Ortho Rose Pride fertilizer for years with success, plus Ortho’s Rose and Flower Disease Control for fungus.
      I hope this has helped you. Thanks for asking.

    1. That’s a difficult question to answer, not knowing anything about the health of your plant nor the conditions in which it is growing. Is is a young plant? Is it in fertile soil? Light? Water? Perhaps you could give us a few more details?

  1. I love growing roses. Someone many years ago told me roses don’t grow in FL. I’m glad I did not listen to him. I have lost a few, but that hasn’t stopped me. I love the old garden roses and they do very well down here.

    Thanks for this informative post.

    FlowerLady

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