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Pruning A Climbing Rose

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Prudie | 17:13 Sat 09th Apr 2016 | Home & Garden
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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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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'd like to know the answer to that, too, Prudie. My dad insisted that it was very hard to kill a rose - but I managed, so am now cautious.
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Thanks atalanta that doesn't bode well, think I might do the same as mine has got so straggly it looks a mess. I've never been good with roses. Jourdain I don't think I've killed one but none of mine are good plus I get loads of blackspot.
Isn't blackspot due to a polluted atmosphere, Prudie? Vague memories stirring, and something about soot. This is back to the industrial North in the 50's and 60's! Sorry no more use :(.
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I thought it was more of a fungus that thrives in warm wet conditions, I'm not sure but even though I spray I always get it.
Some tips on how to cure / prevent Blackspot here.

http://www.gardeningknowhow.com/ornamental/flowers/roses/black-spot-roses.htm
Ta muchly, tonyav.

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Pruning A Climbing Rose

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