Roses 3 Soil And Planting 2
Roses: Soil And Planting 2
Hardy roses, especially the strong field-grown plants, should be set in the early fall if practicable. It is desirable to get them out just as soon as they have shed their foliage. If not then, they may be planted in the early spring. At that season it is advisable to plant them as early as the ground is dry enough, and before the buds have started to grow. Dormant pot-plants may also be set out early, but they should be perfectly inactive. Setting them out early in this condition is preferable to waiting till they are in foliage and full bloom, as is so often required by buyers. Growing pot-plants may be planted any time in spring after danger of frost is past, or even during the summer, if they are watered and shaded for a few days.
Open-ground plants should be set about as deep as they stood previously, excepting budded or grafted plants, which should be set so that the union of the stock and graft will be 2 to 4 inches below the surface of the ground. Plants from pots may also be set an inch deeper than they stood in the pots. The soil should be in a friable condition. Roses should have the soil compact immediately about their roots; but we should distinguish between planting roses and setting fence posts. The dryer the soil the more firmly it may be pressed.
As a general statement, it may be said that roses on their own roots will prove more satisfactory for the general run of planters than budded stock. On own-rooted stock, the suckers or shoots from below the surface of the soil will be of the same kind, whereas with budded roses there is danger of the stock (usually Manetti or dog rose) starting into growth and, not being discovered, outgrowing the bud, taking possession, and finally killing out the weaker growth. Still, if the plants are set deep enough to prevent adventitious buds of the stock from starting and the grower is alert, this difficulty is reduced to a minimum. There is no question but that finer roses may be grown than from plants on their own roots, withstanding the heat of the American summer, if the grower takes the proper precautions.
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CinerariaExhibition preview - A Passion for Art at the Glynn Vivian Art Gallery , Swansea, until June 29 2008. Like many similar associations in museums and galleries across the UK, the Association of Friends of the Glynn Vivian in Swansea has played a vital ... Read more
A PASSION FOR ART - 50 YEARS OF FRIENDS OF THE GLYNN VIVIAN - 24 Hour MuseumThey asked for it and he delivered. Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal today showered his benevolence on seven elusive villages of Kandi area near Nurpur Bedi block of Ropar that had hardly attracted government attention in the past many decades ... Read more
CM’s gift to 7 Kandi villages - TribuneRead more
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