Pruning Roses
Pruning
your roses is one of the most needed and the most annoyingly difficult tasks
that goes with proper rose care. It takes a steady hand the proper procedure to
ensure the best possible roses that you can get.
Pruning
your roses is basically the act of getting rid of dead and damaged pieces, and
teaching the new growth to grow in the correct outward facing direction. That
just means that you are training them to grow facing the outside of the shrub
or bush. This gives your roses the correct amount of circulating air to thrive
in.
Here
is a list of the proper techniques to guide through the pruning process.
- Soak your pruning shears in equal parts of
water and bleach. This will help to protect your roses from diseases and
insects.
- Pruning in the early spring, just after the
snow melts is best. However you want to do it before any new growth
appears. The best time would be when the buds are swelled, or red.
- Hand shears are the best tool for pruning the
smaller branches. (about 4 ½ inches thick) Loppers are best for the
branches that are thicker or the thickness of a pencil. This will make it
easier. You should use a heavy pair of rose gloves to avoid the thorns.
- You want to get rid of the winter protection
that you set up like cones, burlap, and mounded soil.
- You want to get rid of the dead wood first. (That
would be the black wood that is black inside as well as out).
- Next, you wan to get rid of the thinner wood,
which is the stems that are thinner than a pencil.
- Cut all of the branches that cross or overlap
one another because these are often diseased or will become so.
- Keep the remaining five healthy branches.
These are often dark green. You will want to make your roses fluted or
vases shaped, with an open center, and keep them from touching or
overlapping each other.
- Cut your healthy canes to be about one to four
feet long, or whatever size that you prefer.
- Cut you roses properly so that they stay
healthy. Cut so that the bud is facing outside of the bush and at a 45
degree angle that slopes inward so that you can keep promoting the outward
growth.
- You should use bypass pruners that work like
scissors and not the anvil types because the anvils crush the stems and
make the roses more available to diseases.
Go to the next article: Container Gardening: Planting Potted Roses