Pruning Your
Roses
Pruning roses is one of those operations which
alarm the uninitiated, who, fearful of making mistakes, leave the rose trees all to themselves.
Hybrid Perpetuals do best when well cut back, and the weaker the plant the greater should be the
application of the knife. This is a rule difficult to impress
upon people, but it is a fundamental unalterable principle.
New rose trees planted only
the season before should be always pruned more than the old established bushes, for this will induce them
to shoot out with more vigor.
For show blooms or
for cutting from
Before commencing pruning, a
pleasant one if gloves are worn to protect the hands, we should make up our minds what we want, large rose
flowers and less of them, or quantities of rose blooms of moderate
size. If we desire an abundance,
we can leave five or six eyes on each strong root, and cut all the weakly ones out, if we wish to dazzle the
eyes of our neighbors with the circumference of each individual rose, we must prune so as to leave but three
eyes, or at the most four on each shoot.
Prune in March and
April
March is the best time for
pruning Hybrid Perpetuals, though every autumn the tallest shoots should be
considerably reduced in length, as nothing is gained by letting them sway about in the wind all the
winter.
April is the month to prune
Tea Roses. They must be treated more gently. Every brown or withered shoot must be cut away at the base, and the sound
ones that are left only shortened about a third of their length. Roses are generally produced on these
long shoots, which are eventually pegged down in many cases.
There is nothing like practical experience in pruning Teas. Some of them scarcely blossom at all if cut back much, while others will
stand strong measures, and be all the better for them.
Some sorts need no
pruning
There are many kinds,
notably Evergreen Roses, which only require to have their dead shoots cut out, and
the brown ends snipped off, where pruning in fact is not needed.
Cut back evergreens
in autumn
Of course from time to time
even the Evergreen Roses (Rosa Sempervirens) must be well cut back, otherwise they would grow into a confused mass. It should, however, in the case of these free growing roses, always be
done in the autumn, or all the embryo flowers will be cut off.
In treating Turner’s Crimson
Rambler, the best method is the following. In October cut out
every bit of old wood, and only leave the new shoots, which are easily distinguishable from those which have
flowered, as they are a much lighter green and softer. Leave
the whole rose tree severely alone in the spring, and at the right time you will have a splendid crop of its
beautiful bunches. In this particular variety it is essential to
prune it in this manner every autumn.
Banksian, Bourbon,
Polyantha, China, and Japanese Roses require little or no pruning.
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