I just saw this today, 09/30/2024 and it is as timeless, useful information as was the day you filmed it! I really appreciate your style of teaching. I can't thank you enough for your commitment to roses and helping us all grow them better. THANK YOU from Western Washington! 💛🖤💛
You are one of the few people that has the ability to clearly convey your information to an audience , great presentation, thanks for sharing................
I never got to thank you for this video. I purchased a rose unaware it was a climber and pruned it back hard. 😞 Finally I looked at the tag and saw it was a climber. After slapping my forehead and waiting a full three years its finally starting to bud again but this time I know exactly how to care for it. Crown Princess Margaretta will be as beautiful as the day I brought her home from the garden center! You need your own TV show you are informative and entertaining.
This channel is too undervalued. There’s many gardening channels and many of them are useful, but many talk so loud and so aggressively excited, that you get anxiety watching them. This guy just spits nothing but facts and great info in a very calm way, I can listen forever. Definitely trying this trick coming season.
Love that you share your knowledge. I accidently propagated my double knock out pink rose when I pruned in February. I did not pick up one branch and it became it's own rose!! It even bloomed this fall!!
FLAWLESS video! Excellent information and camerawork. I plant for others and love to recommend sites to clients so they understand WHAT and WHY I do things. They appreciate the information. A well informed customer always wants more and more once they understand that success is achievable because one follows a scientific process. People like to be informed, even if they haven't the time or physical strength to do the work themselves. THANK YOU!!!
Wow. You are so detail and explaining in regards to plants what to do and how to do it. Thank you so much. Tomorrow I’m going to take a good look at my Roses. I feel this year I will have some beautiful blooms thanks to you. 🌷🌸🌈
One of my favorite aspects of your videos is the calming mountainous background. Would be cool to see a video of you someday discussing how the local topographies benefit your rose farm :)
This year I've been keeping some of the offcuts with good shoots on them and plugging them into the pots, hoping they may grow out into strong new plants on their own roots, rather than grafted ones. So far, in mid winter here (Australia) as buds are beginning to fatten, they're looking pretty vital and still growing. Never can tell what may grow from a cutting. and I hate to waste good shooting stems with so much life in them still. Thanks for these videos, always something more to learn, very encouraging!
I just got a trellis made yesterday bc I brought a peach color climbing rose bush ❤thanks so much for making this video. I have now learned how to train my bush😊❤. Happy gardening you guys.
I went through and have watched multiple videos on climbing roses. This video is for sure the BEST and most informational. Thank you for taking the time to give us beginners all this good info!
I just bought two rambling roses that look a mess and are like 8ft high. I have the perfect spot for them and will be planting and training them this weekend. Thank you for all your tips.
Thanks for the information. You mentioned the Seven Sisters rose at the beginning of the video. My mother has my Great, Great Grandmothers Seven Sisters rose that's been passed down thru the family. It's amazing how long they can last.
Jason, I know this is older but I'm binge watching sense I only joined a year ago, I'm trying to see what I missed. Anyway I watched your video introducing good climbers and this is great to know stuff after you get your climber. Thank you so much for making it clear for us.
This was another great! Video TY!! I just love roses & have many wild & climbing ones in my yard. I’m slowly & surely learning how to care for them so thanks for all the tips!
Brief, clear, and so much gardening knowledge given in just a video. Its like just a snap, an overnight magic🙃 and I can prune my own roses. Yes, i am confident. Im gonna to prune my roses this weekend. Thanks to you.
After 5 years if cutting down my climbing rose to the stumps to the ground, after summers if only a few flowers at the top, i knew no different.. I saw some vids kept 5 canes last week and trained along our fence.. And already new shoots are developing.. Looking forward to seeing the full results next summer... 👍
Omg you're amazing for teaching this. I've learned about horizontal and vertical, how many stems to keep, and why have I never thought to use jute!! I am replacing all my plastic today! I do not like plastic as it is. Thank you! 🌹
All your videos have helped me so much to grow a rose garden to honor my gardener Mom , who died of cancer ❤️. Two we planted together last summer but now I have to keep going on my own. I’m in zone 3 and planting Canadian Explorer Roses whenever I find them. Thank you 🌹
Love to wstch your vids. Its so easy to follow...you made it simple yet so interesting. M gonna try to do the same on my climbing roses. Bravo.....😊🌹💐🌹
Such a helpful video! Really appreciate all the info and the really clear video. Getting to see where an experienced pruner takes their cuts is a big help! Can't wait to get my climbing roses in place and start training them!
Thank you for the video. I have a climbing rose that has been growing against our chicken run for years. I planted it there after buying it on clearance nearly dead and had no idea what it was. It has grown like crazy and thrives. Anyway, it has such a tangle of vines up on top of the run but many I can't reach to remove. However, there are at least a half dozen brand new vertical shoots this year on it and I've been trying to figure out what to do with them. I didn't want to lop them all off but your suggestion about training them horizontally is brilliant. I will get to work on that tomorrow. We planted a new white climbing rose on the other side of the run this year and I was SHOCKED that there are NO climbing roses locally to be bought. I don't know why they're sold out everywhere but they are. I was so disappointed. It's made me look into propagating roses which is where I stumbled on your channel. I have thought about attempting to propagate roses many times but never tried so this year we're going for it. We have a peach climbing rose that has extreme growth. There was a barn in the back that it was planted against and it grew up over the roof but I removed all but the original carport and it's in a strange place for such a gorgeous rose. I am trying to get more of that to put against the other barns or even on another side of the chicken run or another chicken run. I do love roses. I love your channel. Thanks again! :)
Cool man, thanks. I just planted some Queen Elizabeth myself. Prepared the soil real good and it's already taking off. It's only been a couple of days Haha.
Thank you Jason! I've got a few Generous Gardener and Claire Austin and one Don Juan that I'll learn from this year - they are still so young that I don't yet have this much canvas to work with. I was thinking of getting Altissima in the coming year - thanks for helping me understand roses better. Warmest regards Jennie
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm watching my 3rd video by you. You're the best and most informative of garden teachers I have found. I'm going to learn a lot from you! Thank you so much.
Ooooh. That might be the solution I need for my crazy "bush & climber" that are growing together. I was thinking about a trellis but didn't want to go vertical if it would decrease blooms. Great tip!
I recently bought iceberg climber rose plant. I plan to train it on the fence. Does it produce flowers in the first year? Or does it take couple of years to continuously bloom as seen in pics online? Thanks!
@@gayathriumesh my iceberg is floribunda, it bloomed the year I bought, I think as long as you water and fertilize it well , it should bloom even it is small.
Thank You very much. Finally I found it. In the spring I will know what to do to get my climbers to bud along the stem and branch out. I have one to three stems on my climbing rose bushes and would like to know how I can get them to create more stems at the base like how yours are. They are about five years old and unsure that since they are young they just haven't had time with a short time to grow more as my roses don't start producing new growth until late April or May when the weather is finally nice. Thank you
Hi Natalia. There's no real trick - just the basics: sunny spot, reasonable soil, consistent moisture and feeding & regular pruning to refresh the growth at the base.
Hi Jason I followed your pruning and training advice last year and the results were outstanding. So many more blooms, thank you. One question, do the very tips of the lateral stems continue to grow horizontally and put out even more buds on new growth this year? Your videos give me such confidence, keep them coming. Thanks Wendy
Thanks Wendy. You'll have to respond to what the rose does - the main horizontal stems might continue to grow, and (space allowing) you can pin them horizontally along your support. The side-shoots can be trimmed back to just 2 or 3 nodes and they should initiate flowering beautifully. Best of luck!
We had a climbing rose don't know the name or type It had red flowers I loved it but my husband hated it after a year or Two he would cut it to the ground and it would grow back lush and beautiful a couple times he tried digging it up it was faithful it grew back after 23 yrs it finally died Best plant I ever had.
Thank you. We have several climbers, namely New Dawn, Viking Queen and Sally Holmes to tend to this week. Will see if we can extend the canes on Louise Odier and Yolande d’Aragon horizontally though space might be an issue.
Wow! You got Sally Holmes! Only roses can stir the slightest ever so brief envy in me. Then I'm happy for you forever. I do have Abraham Darby and Pat Austin.
I enjoy watching your videos, thank you for sharing your expertise with us. Have you made a video about when to transplant a climbing rose in zone 8? Do you think it would be OK to move a climbing rose bush at this time in zone 8?This week we are going to be int upper 80's to mid 90's. I know is better to transplant a rose during the fall but I am afraid that if I wait until then the plant would be too big for me to handle. I just noticed that young climbing rose bush about 2 weeks ago, it seems the plant developed out of a steam that got buried under the dirt without me noticing it (I do not remember planting it). The reason I need to move it is because it kind of blocks the gate entrance to my yard, it definitely needs a better location. Your help is greatly appreciated.
Hi Jason. I love your channel, you have such thoughtful, informative content that is really useful to me. I would like to ask you a question, if you can spare the time. How do you go about determining how large of a support is needed for a climbing rose? I bought the climbing sport of Belinda’s Dream last year and have come to realize that the arbor that i bought to let it grow on is way, way too small. The rose at maturity for my area (zone 8 central Alabama) can get to be 15-20 feet tall and the arbor that it’s on is 2’x6’. Thanks in advance for your advice and I hope you have a happy and successful New Year 😊!
Thank you for the clear and specific tutorial. You mentioned flowering shoots when you eliminated a branch that was growing forward. How do you identify a flowering shoot versus a leaf bud or shoot?
I don't spend much time worried about what any particular stem will do - I aim for overall health and shape, and trust that if I leave enough horizontal stem in place, there will be development of flowering lateral shoots.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm thank you, it's just that you mentioned it so I was wondering. Usually rounder fatter buds indicate flower buds but I can't differentiate them on roses.
Best climbing rose video I've seen, and I've watched many. Loved the visuals of which canes to keep and which to chop. Question: I have two Eden (Pierre de ronsard) climbers. They were my first roses ever. Planted 5 years ago when I didn't know what I was doing. I didn't even feed them😱 Anyway, I have been having trouble getting the canes to put on any real length. I let the grow vertically all season but they don't get longer than 6 feet before I have to train them horizontally before winter. What can I do to encourage longer canes? I'm zone 5 usda (z6 Canada), SW Ontario Also, I purchased a tiny John Davis rose which will one day replace the Edens. Do you grow explorers in BC? Would love a video! And how to establish young climbers. Thank you
Thanks. I'll add that topic to my list. Aside from supplying consistent moisture and fertilizer, there's a limit to how much you can encourage the top growth in a season.
I just saw this today, 09/30/2024 and it is as timeless, useful information as was the day you filmed it! I really appreciate your style of teaching. I can't thank you enough for your commitment to roses and helping us all grow them better. THANK YOU from Western Washington! 💛🖤💛
You are one of the few people that has the ability to clearly convey your information to an audience , great presentation, thanks for sharing................
Thank you for this and many other videos. I find the content presented in an easy to learn method. And there is no annoying music!
I never got to thank you for this video. I purchased a rose unaware it was a climber and pruned it back hard. 😞 Finally I looked at the tag and saw it was a climber. After slapping my forehead and waiting a full three years its finally starting to bud again but this time I know exactly how to care for it. Crown Princess Margaretta will be as beautiful as the day I brought her home from the garden center! You need your own TV show you are informative and entertaining.
Thanks JoAnn - so happy to be able to help
This channel is too undervalued.
There’s many gardening channels and many of them are useful, but many talk so loud and so aggressively excited, that you get anxiety watching them.
This guy just spits nothing but facts and great info in a very calm way, I can listen forever.
Definitely trying this trick coming season.
Haha that is so true! I have had to literally block (mark as "do not recommend this channel") a couple of them now.
I would like to thank you sharing not just your knowledge but the experience especially about Canadian roses garden 😊💯👍👍👍
I love how you explain everything in a concise yet in-depth way. Thank you so much for sharing your expertise.
Thanks Crisitina - I'm glad you're enjoying the vids
Love that you share your knowledge. I accidently propagated my double knock out pink rose when I pruned in February. I did not pick up one branch and it became it's own rose!! It even bloomed this fall!!
Lol. Some people just have the "knack"
FLAWLESS video! Excellent information and camerawork. I plant for others and love to recommend sites to clients so they understand WHAT and WHY I do things. They appreciate the information. A well informed customer always wants more and more once they understand that success is achievable because one follows a scientific process. People like to be informed, even if they haven't the time or physical strength to do the work themselves. THANK YOU!!!
My pleasure Barb. I'm in total agreement - your customers are way better off if you can give them the "why". Thanks!
Well said!
Wow. You are so detail and explaining in regards to plants what to do and how to do it. Thank you so much. Tomorrow I’m going to take a good look at my Roses. I feel this year I will have some beautiful blooms thanks to you. 🌷🌸🌈
My absolute pleasure. Thanks for watching and I wish you an excellent season.
One of my favorite aspects of your videos is the calming mountainous background. Would be cool to see a video of you someday discussing how the local topographies benefit your rose farm :)
This year I've been keeping some of the offcuts with good shoots on them and plugging them into the pots, hoping they may grow out into strong new plants on their own roots, rather than grafted ones. So far, in mid winter here (Australia) as buds are beginning to fatten, they're looking pretty vital and still growing. Never can tell what may grow from a cutting. and I hate to waste good shooting stems with so much life in them still. Thanks for these videos, always something more to learn, very encouraging!
I just got a trellis made yesterday bc I brought a peach color climbing rose bush ❤thanks so much for making this video. I have now learned how to train my bush😊❤. Happy gardening you guys.
Your awesome! You make things very easy to understand and follow. Very important especially for a novice! thank you!
Thank you for that professional and very informative presentation.
😊😊 90 seconds in and this video was beyond informative...thanks a million!!!!
I learned a lot, you are a really good teacher, thanks!
Thank you. One of the most detailed and well explained videos yet for climbing roses.
Thanks so much for the feedback Libby.
newbie rose grower here. Really appreciated this vid. Well done! Cheers from Guelph, ON. (always nice to hear the Canadian accent, btw)
Oh... I heard it too... Canada 🇨🇦 😊
I went through and have watched multiple videos on climbing roses. This video is for sure the BEST and most informational. Thank you for taking the time to give us beginners all this good info!
My pleasure. Thanks for the feedback Melanie.
So fun to watch, Jason.
This was So useful. Thank you so much. I feel much more knowledgeable now about how to train a climbing rose!
I just bought two rambling roses that look a mess and are like 8ft high. I have the perfect spot for them and will be planting and training them this weekend. Thank you for all your tips.
My pleasure. Good luck
Thank you for sharing detailed tips. I really appreciate it! I think you gave me the courage to Prune my climber.
Hi i cutting rose plants your way .
Sir you teach us very deeply .thanks .
The most helpful video on this I've seen. Thankyou!
Thanks for the information. You mentioned the Seven Sisters rose at the beginning of the video. My mother has my Great, Great Grandmothers Seven Sisters rose that's been passed down thru the family. It's amazing how long they can last.
Thanks Lance. It's really inspiring to see garden-worthy roses preserved through sharing - and even moreso that it traveled under its own name!
My grandmother and her 6 sisters all had Seven Sisters roses. I was disappointed at about 10 years old when I realized there wasn't one for 3 sisters.
@@MissTrixie29 :-)
Jason, I know this is older but I'm binge watching sense I only joined a year ago, I'm trying to see what I missed. Anyway I watched your video introducing good climbers and this is great to know stuff after you get your climber. Thank you so much for making it clear for us.
This was another great! Video TY!! I just love roses & have many wild & climbing ones in my yard. I’m slowly & surely learning how to care for them so thanks for all the tips!
I’ve never had climbing roses, but now I know much more about their unique quirks. Thanks!
Brief, clear, and so much gardening knowledge given in just a video. Its like just a snap, an overnight magic🙃 and I can prune my own roses. Yes, i am confident. Im gonna to prune my roses this weekend. Thanks to you.
Best of luck!
After 5 years if cutting down my climbing rose to the stumps to the ground, after summers if only a few flowers at the top, i knew no different.. I saw some vids kept 5 canes last week and trained along our fence.. And already new shoots are developing.. Looking forward to seeing the full results next summer... 👍
Excellent presentation!
Thanks Kathleen!
I planted a climber for the first time. Thank you for your tips, learned a lot.
Omg you're amazing for teaching this. I've learned about horizontal and vertical, how many stems to keep, and why have I never thought to use jute!! I am replacing all my plastic today! I do not like plastic as it is. Thank you! 🌹
Excellent presentation. I have learnt so much from it.
Hi Jason another very informative and helpful video as ever. Stay safe to you and all your family. Take care Natalie 😁
Thanks Natalie - and best wishes to you and your family as well.
Great video! Very informative! Thank you!
My pleasure Alia. Thanks for watching
fascinating and so much good information, much to ponder including layering and pegging!
Thank you my teacher , very educate film
All your videos have helped me so much to grow a rose garden to honor my gardener Mom , who died of cancer ❤️. Two we planted together last summer but now I have to keep going on my own. I’m in zone 3 and planting Canadian Explorer Roses whenever I find them. Thank you 🌹
Sorry to hear about your Mom - but it's wonderful to hear how your shared this hobby.
Love to wstch your vids. Its so easy to follow...you made it simple yet so interesting. M gonna try to do the same on my climbing roses. Bravo.....😊🌹💐🌹
I'm glad you'll be giving it a try. Thanks for your kind comments
Brilliant, Jason. Many thanks.
AMAZING VIDEO! Thank you for making sound so easy for some who has zero experience with gardening. LOVE this video!
My husband is gonna think I'm cheating on him because of these videos. But he buys every rose I want so there!
Such a helpful video! Really appreciate all the info and the really clear video. Getting to see where an experienced pruner takes their cuts is a big help! Can't wait to get my climbing roses in place and start training them!
I really appreciate all your information!!!!
I have learned so much from you! Thank you. I can’t wait to see my garden this summer after watching you🌹
You bet - I hope you have an excellent gardening year!
Good information and I like it
Thank you so much for your usefull tips! ❤
Many thanks. Great presentation.
Thank you for the video. I have a climbing rose that has been growing against our chicken run for years. I planted it there after buying it on clearance nearly dead and had no idea what it was. It has grown like crazy and thrives. Anyway, it has such a tangle of vines up on top of the run but many I can't reach to remove. However, there are at least a half dozen brand new vertical shoots this year on it and I've been trying to figure out what to do with them. I didn't want to lop them all off but your suggestion about training them horizontally is brilliant. I will get to work on that tomorrow. We planted a new white climbing rose on the other side of the run this year and I was SHOCKED that there are NO climbing roses locally to be bought. I don't know why they're sold out everywhere but they are. I was so disappointed. It's made me look into propagating roses which is where I stumbled on your channel. I have thought about attempting to propagate roses many times but never tried so this year we're going for it. We have a peach climbing rose that has extreme growth. There was a barn in the back that it was planted against and it grew up over the roof but I removed all but the original carport and it's in a strange place for such a gorgeous rose. I am trying to get more of that to put against the other barns or even on another side of the chicken run or another chicken run. I do love roses. I love your channel. Thanks again! :)
Thanks Ashley - always great to hear from another rose enthusiast. And I definitely recommend giving cutting propagation a try
So fun to have all those unique spaces for growing! Enjoy every moment!
I LOVE your video! Thank you for sharing it. Very very helpful! 😊
I am going to apply all of your recomenedation...thank you so much...😍😊😊😊😉😉
Best of luck for your climbers
very useful. I wish I watched this before I pruned the main cane.
Me encanta su canal gracias por enseñarnos tan bien gracias
Excellent explanation. Thanks!
Thank you for the clear explanations - much appreciated!
Informações muito úteis, fáceis de entender. Muito grato.
Excelente canal
Great information here. Thank you!
This is sooo useful video, thank you so much, learn a lot.. Will do with my climbing rose here ☺
Cool man, thanks.
I just planted some Queen Elizabeth myself.
Prepared the soil real good and it's already taking off.
It's only been a couple of days Haha.
Excellent tutorial, thank you!🌹🌞💐
So much information to absorb. Thank you.
Again, this really helped. Thank you.
My pleasure. Thanks for watching
Excellent video you answered my question
Thanks for this video, very informative and well presented.
Thanks Eliza
Thank you Jason! I've got a few Generous Gardener and Claire Austin and one Don Juan that I'll learn from this year - they are still so young that I don't yet have this much canvas to work with. I was thinking of getting Altissima in the coming year - thanks for helping me understand roses better.
Warmest regards
Jennie
Great video
So helpful! Thank you 😀
Gosh I learned so much! Thanks so much for this!
My pleasure Deborah - thanks for watching
That was very informative. I learned a lot from this video!
I have a 3 year old DA Spirit of Freedom that is put of control. Now I know what to do from your video. Thank you
My pleasure Samean
Thank you. Loved it 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Tq for this very useful guide.
To get rose climbers to flower more vertically train them in a looping "s" shape
Thanks. I'm sure I'll have to do some variation of that (or a barber-pole spiral) for my pillar roses.
How do you do that, wrap them around a trellis?
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm watching my 3rd video by you. You're the best and most informative of garden teachers I have found. I'm going to learn a lot from you! Thank you so much.
Ooooh. That might be the solution I need for my crazy "bush & climber" that are growing together. I was thinking about a trellis but didn't want to go vertical if it would decrease blooms. Great tip!
I have Julia child and iceberg , they bloom during the whole season , very beautiful.
Love both of those. Iceberg's a bit susceptible to black spot in my garden, but keeps blooming nonetheless
I recently bought iceberg climber rose plant. I plan to train it on the fence. Does it produce flowers in the first year? Or does it take couple of years to continuously bloom as seen in pics online? Thanks!
@@gayathriumesh my iceberg is floribunda, it bloomed the year I bought, I think as long as you water and fertilize it well , it should bloom even it is small.
Thanks for your wonderful advice. Here in Puget Sound, it's great to get clear content specific to the west. Subscribed!
Thanks so much Linda
Thank you for good information 👌 👍 🙏
Excellent. Thank you!
Thank You very much. Finally I found it. In the spring I will know what to do to get my climbers to bud along the stem and branch out. I have one to three stems on my climbing rose bushes and would like to know how I can get them to create more stems at the base like how yours are. They are about five years old and unsure that since they are young they just haven't had time with a short time to grow more as my roses don't start producing new growth until late April or May when the weather is finally nice. Thank you
Hi Natalia. There's no real trick - just the basics: sunny spot, reasonable soil, consistent moisture and feeding & regular pruning to refresh the growth at the base.
Thank you so much for explaining! I've learned a ton from your channel! :)
Hi Jason
I followed your pruning and training advice last year and the results were outstanding. So many more blooms, thank you.
One question, do the very tips of the lateral stems continue to grow horizontally and put out even more buds on new growth this year?
Your videos give me such confidence, keep them coming. Thanks Wendy
Thanks Wendy. You'll have to respond to what the rose does - the main horizontal stems might continue to grow, and (space allowing) you can pin them horizontally along your support. The side-shoots can be trimmed back to just 2 or 3 nodes and they should initiate flowering beautifully. Best of luck!
We had a climbing rose don't know the name or type It had red flowers I loved it but my husband hated it after a year or Two he would cut it to the ground and it would grow back lush and beautiful a couple times he tried digging it up it was faithful it grew back after 23 yrs it finally died Best plant I ever had.
Watching this to save myself from climbing rose mistakes. I accidentally bought a climbing rose plant😊
Amazing!
Very useful
Thank you. We have several climbers, namely New Dawn, Viking Queen and Sally Holmes to tend to this week. Will see if we can extend the canes on Louise Odier and Yolande d’Aragon horizontally though space might be an issue.
Nice collection. I haven't seen Viking Queen in our area, but it looks interesting.
Wow! You got Sally Holmes! Only roses can stir the slightest ever so brief envy in me. Then I'm happy for you forever. I do have Abraham Darby and Pat Austin.
Thank you so much!
Very nice, thank you!
My pleasure. Thanks for watching
I enjoy watching your videos, thank you for sharing your expertise with us. Have you made a video about when to transplant a climbing rose in zone 8? Do you think it would be OK to move a climbing rose bush at this time in zone 8?This week we are going to be int upper 80's to mid 90's. I know is better to transplant a rose during the fall but I am afraid that if I wait until then the plant would be too big for me to handle. I just noticed that young climbing rose bush about 2 weeks ago, it seems the plant developed out of a steam that got buried under the dirt without me noticing it (I do not remember planting it). The reason I need to move it is because it kind of blocks the gate entrance to my yard, it definitely needs a better location. Your help is greatly appreciated.
Thank you, great tutorial that I will follow as soon as I buy twine. I bought zip ties 😅😮
you explain things so well... NoNo Nannette
Fantastic thank you 😁
Fantastic vid! thank you, quick question.. does that big black pot have a bottom in it?
Thanks. Yes - but I'm pretty much assured that Super D will find some roots through the drain holes.
So you plant/keep a climbing rose in a pot, not just in the ground?@@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Great video! Are you thinking about planting the rose in soil?
Thanks Phung - this rose seems happy enough in the container for now
Hi Jason. I love your channel, you have such thoughtful, informative content that is really useful to me. I would like to ask you a question, if you can spare the time. How do you go about determining how large of a support is needed for a climbing rose? I bought the climbing sport of Belinda’s Dream last year and have come to realize that the arbor that i bought to let it grow on is way, way too small. The rose at maturity for my area (zone 8 central Alabama) can get to be 15-20 feet tall and the arbor that it’s on is 2’x6’. Thanks in advance for your advice and I hope you have a happy and successful New Year 😊!
Thanks so much James. Nothing much I can say moreso than Helpmefind (for a size range), knowing your climate and then trial and error!
My own favorite rose for fragrance is Tropicana, a hybrid tea.
Love it! Thanks Margaret
Thank you for the clear and specific tutorial. You mentioned flowering shoots when you eliminated a branch that was growing forward. How do you identify a flowering shoot versus a leaf bud or shoot?
I don't spend much time worried about what any particular stem will do - I aim for overall health and shape, and trust that if I leave enough horizontal stem in place, there will be development of flowering lateral shoots.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm thank you, it's just that you mentioned it so I was wondering. Usually rounder fatter buds indicate flower buds but I can't differentiate them on roses.
Best climbing rose video I've seen, and I've watched many.
Loved the visuals of which canes to keep and which to chop.
Question: I have two Eden (Pierre de ronsard) climbers. They were my first roses ever. Planted 5 years ago when I didn't know what I was doing. I didn't even feed them😱
Anyway, I have been having trouble getting the canes to put on any real length. I let the grow vertically all season but they don't get longer than 6 feet before I have to train them horizontally before winter. What can I do to encourage longer canes? I'm zone 5 usda (z6 Canada), SW Ontario
Also, I purchased a tiny John Davis rose which will one day replace the Edens. Do you grow explorers in BC? Would love a video! And how to establish young climbers. Thank you
Thanks. I'll add that topic to my list. Aside from supplying consistent moisture and fertilizer, there's a limit to how much you can encourage the top growth in a season.