Quizzes & Puzzles19 mins ago
Pruning A Climbing Rose
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All the base shoots on an established climbing rose are 2 or 3 feet worth of thick old wood. If I cut back into those will they shoot from that area again? If it wasn't for the new wood higher up you'd think it was dead.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I did exactly that with a rose last autumn. It had been wonderful - bush rose - white - often had over a hundred blooms open at the same time, but it had got very scruffy and had lots of dead bits - so I thought - "it's kill or cure" and cut it right down from about 5ft to about 20" leaving one main trunk. It has produced a few small shoots, but I fear it will never return to its former glory. Alas, it is now for the Great Garden In The Sky.
I also have a climbing rose which refuses to shoot where I want it to, in spite of careful pruning. Lots of bits have died, lots of sideshoots have sprouted too low or too high. Even though I bought it from a very expensive rose-grower, having read all the promises about its growth-habits, which were rubbish. That rose, too, is for the GGITS very soon.
I also have a climbing rose which refuses to shoot where I want it to, in spite of careful pruning. Lots of bits have died, lots of sideshoots have sprouted too low or too high. Even though I bought it from a very expensive rose-grower, having read all the promises about its growth-habits, which were rubbish. That rose, too, is for the GGITS very soon.
Some tips on how to cure / prevent Blackspot here.
http:// www.gar deningk nowhow. com/orn amental /flower s/roses /black- spot-ro ses.htm
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