Holy cow, I think i have a geen thumb now, that climbler i was telling you about is the most beautiful thing i have ever grown. Last year i started tucking and tying large canes to the center of the bush. This year i am rewarded with masses of blooms. It looks like a giant red pom pom. Thank you again!
This is by far the best I’ve ever seen. Strange RUclips algorithm does no show brilliant videos 😩 thanks very much. I’ll share this video on different social media platforms.
Thanks for the vids, you've taught me alot. I live in Texas so there are alot of "conditions" you have to deal with. A friend dug a up a climber and asked me if I wanted it. I said yes thinking it was a lost cause, but a good learning experience. First year the thing sulked. Second year I got a few flowers. Third year, heat wave and I thought it died so I cut it to the ground. This year, its chock full of new growth, all because you're a great teacher. I saved a climber! Thanks
I finally got a Chris Dior Hybrid tea Rose before my old one finally dies. It came bare root and looked so dry . Some roots fall out already. I followed what you said unpacked it and soaked for 24 hours . After....I saw some sprouts came out n young roots show. I planted it like how you illustrated . I hope it continues to grow. It’s very warm in our location . One of your member said better to heavily water it then when seems drying out heavily water it again . Just want to know this is best method to make sure of it’s successful growth. Alicia(wife)
Paul-- Your vids are great and very informative and most all questions are answered. Most other vids I have seen are so generic they are basically all the same yet different and still not telling you enough or what you really want to know. Keep up the good work. I live in indy yes I have heavy clay and very rocky soil. And this year Im trying myfirst roses. Im trying to use the knowledge you have given in the how tos and hopefully I wont kill the roses. Thanks again for sharing.
Thanks for this video! I just bought 9 bareroot roses - six own root and two grafted - and now I know what to do with them this weekend. I've got your book and it's so helpful, but I still love your How To videos!
@yes350yes Thank you for the kind words and I'm glad you like them. If you have questions on your roses be sure to come see us on our rose forum. You can access via our website. There is a link on our You Tube Home page
Hi Paul, thank you so much for your amazing advice online. I heard you say in one of your videos that you have horses near by, where you get all your horse manure from, please can you tell me how long do you keep the horse manure to mature, before spreading it under your roses ?
all the videos I've watched all say the same thing.. to leave it above the soil level about 2 inches..I'm just seeing this video, but I buried mine a week ago to where the canes were just sticking out like u said.. & it's doing much better than my neighbor who planted HER union above the soil level! I tried to tell her lol
I'm from Chicago and have been planting roses since I was a teenager. Back then I learned that you should always have the bud union under the ground level since it gets very cold there during winter. But now that I live in the Pacific Northwest I kept doing the same thing and my roses are very happy here too.
I planted 42 bare root roses and Thanks to this man I will go and cover the crown to prevent wind damage. How long does it take for the rose to start leaves then flowers. His info is great.
Joseph Ryan Thanks for the kind words! figure 3-4 weeks for leaves depending on the time of year and flowers a couple of months after that. it will vary by climate, time of year etc
Yes, you can plant them directly into pots. I've not used either of those miracle gro products, but in looking at them on-line the expand looks better. But, I would talk to someone at a local garden center who has experience with it first. Pot plates would be good as they help with drainage. Roses don't like "wet feet" meaning the soil stays saturated long after you water them. Do you live in a rainy or dry climate.
Since you are dry I would use a soil that helps retain moisture. I always like to wait until the roses are at least a year old before I prune. And even then I do so lightly. Best time to prune is in late winter very, very early spring.
Roses like infrequent deep watering. The best thing to do is water it heavily, let it dry out somewhat and then water it heavily again. Don't give it a little water every day. Just soak it when you do and then wait until the soil is just on the dry side.
Paul Zimmerman Roses I had a question. When I got my roots they were very light and I didn't plant them right away. I had to wait 5 days. Do you think they are dried out and dead? I hope there's still a chance they will grow. 😭💔😭💔
Think Dry.. Summer the hotest is 42 and Winter at night never gets lower then 0ºC. Will buy a pot plate for them :) . When will be the first time i can start pruning them please? Thanks so much :)
you should have created a ring to help trap the water. also making a mound to stand the root system on and stretch the roots, make sure you explain that. you make valid points except the ones i have listed
Making a ring where I live with good rains and a heavier soil can often drown a rose with standing water. I used to build the mound when I first started in roses. I stopped some 15 years ago and after planting thousands of roses without doing it have decided it's not needed. It doesn't hurt, but it's not needed.
I tried to find the forum board mentioned in the video and did not see it available any longer. My question after watching your transplanting and bare root planting video's is this. Would it be safe to uproot a 40-60+ year old rose bushes in the late end of winter in southern NY and then stored in a garage in northern PA until early spring to be planted? I am a vegetable gardener and have no experience with roses or flowers. And am trying to save the roses from a childhood home to be replanted at a new home and am scared I could kill them.
I closed the forum down a few years back. It wasn't getting much traffic anymore. To your question, I think you can do it. Cut them back hard and pot them up in large pots with good potting soil. Keeping them in the garage is good. Keep the soil damp but not wet until the temperature warm up and they start to leaf out. When all danger of frost is past move them outside into the sun. I would leave them in the pots for several months so they can develop a full root ball. When they've done so then transplant them into the ground. You might lost them because they are so old but I've done the same with older roses and have had success.
Hi, I got some important questions about some mail bareroot roses of Hybrid Tea rose. I really dont want them to die for me... Gonna try in pots(dont have much luck in the garden).Can i plant each of them straight into 20.3 liter pots? Have two types of compost miracle gro expand n gro & miracle gro all purpose compost.Which one should i plant them in? Or i should use half compost & half my clay garden soil? & should i get them pot plates? Thanks so much for the help :)
Hi i bought another 4 bare root roses from another plant nursery on ebay(which came with a bit twiggy growth plus mold growing). So i had to prune them all. The Tea rose roots came very dry & took over 2 weeks to brake dormitory. 1 David Austin got beautiful healthy looking growth straight away but still wilts a bit in the sun(but is doing fine). I guess because the roots didn't grow so much yet. My problem is that my last two David Austins got out very light colored weak growth. These i pruned back to 7 & 3 inches(they were bad). Canes are still green and the bud union is like a gray color and dusty but is getting better now. Got them out of the shed a few days ago & placed in the sun & they started wilting. Trying to give them 3 hours of sun a day at least... Also pinched off some leafs because i read that the rose needs to focus on the roots right now not the growth. All 4 are almost 1 month old. Do you think the roots didn't grow enough yet? What can i do for them? I really love them & don't wish to give up on them & buy new ones to replace. Hoping that at two months old they will be healthy & happy like my first English one. Thanks :) :(
Yes in 23liter pots each. They were in the shed in the light because i read that they need to get used to the temp because they can get transplant shock. Yesterday & today they have been 6 hours in the sun & havent been wilting again for now. I took off lots of the leafs that were wilting so they focus on their roots. Im worried that they look light & thin. They are The Lady Gardener & Scepter'd lsle of David Austin. Dont think they are meant to look that thin. They are the only ones which are worrying me.
AngelHeart Bareroots generally don't need to adjust so they could have been planted right away and mounded up for protection. Taking off leaves is a very good thing and will help. As to the roses looking thin, some roses just come that way and I would not worry about it. Where do you live and based on that I can give some advice as to what to do next.
Dont know that much about roses just reading & trying to learn so i can grow them for my mum. Hardiness zone is 10b +1.7 °C (35 °F) +4.4 °C (40 °F) over here. Hope they will be ok by 2 months old. :)
AngelHeart That helps a lot. Those are not cold temperatures and I would advise you keep them outdoors all the time. The exception would be if the temperature is going to get below 25 F, then I'd put them in the shed. Once you know your last danger of frost is past go ahead and plant them.
It should be showing some new growth in the next few weeks. I would advise the nursery you bought it from you are having problems with it. Cut about an inch of the top of each cane and look at the center. If it's white you are fine. If it's brown that is not good.
I get why you sometimes bury the bud union, in one of your other videos...you said it could cause problems burying it...wouldn't it be better to mound up the bud union...which can be taken away in the warm weather?
Same problem that I have.. I bought some 20 roses, panted them as you told us and about 5-6 roses died.. Same soil, same garden. The bad part is that some other 2-3 roses are slowly gone... The fact is that some 2 months ago all roses had new growth, but now they die. I water them, mulch and so on.. What can I do with the rest of them and prevent further damage?
You can but it probably won't make much difference. Rooting hormone is for getting roots to form from cuttings not really for planting a bare root rose that already has roots.
Is it not uneasier to cope with the unwanted offsprings from the rootstock on grafted roses if the onion is below the surface? Unable to cut the offspring closest to the root seems to make it easier for the unwanted rootstock offspring to regrow.
Hey Paul I love your video's...I'm new to growing Roses and I'm having issues getting my cuttings to root...I've seen your videos and blogs however so far no success...any advice on what I can do to get my cuttings to root....
Glad you like the vids and thanks! The success in rooting cuttings has a lot to do with which rose you are trying to root. Some will root easily and some are almost impossible. Post the question on our rose forum paulzimmermanroses.com/forum and we can answer it better there.
Hi i just got my first bare root rose and wanna start planting it. The problem is that the bud union is covered in wax. and it doesnt want to come off. Can i plant it with the wax? Thanks :)
I would like to rejuvenate my New Dawn climber. I had a lot of dead would, didn’t take very good care of it only because I didn’t know how. It is in a low light , mostly morning sun. It was blooming beautifully for about 3 years. I now have lots of dead wood.
So I planted before I saw the video. The bud unions are jus above the mulch i threw round the base of the roses. Should I leave it be now? add topsoil, mulch? thanx. sweet vids.
I planted them 3 days ago, on monday. One is a very well rooted America climber in a container. The other is a small Don Juan, it came in a container but when I turned the pot over to get the ball out of the pot, it all fell apart and I had bare root. They are both in the ground now as I described union just above the mulch. The don Juan has leaves no buds, the America has about a dozen bud with three roses getting ready to bloom. Thank you for the videos and knowledge. :)
I think if you carefully pull them out of the ground and replant you should be fine. The container one is the one I'd be extra careful with but it sounds like it's very well rooted so I suspect you will be fine.
Hi Paul, I ordered 9 DA bare root roses, it is required to plant them with biotone to prevent good health? What do you think about bottomless planting to avoid the deep digging?
@@Paulzimmermanroses bottomless planting basically is raised bed method. Planting in pot, but cut out the bottom, so the roots will grow into ground soil eventually. It works best to avoid root rot. I got inspired by this gardener, and did a bunch in my backyard since it's the lowest spot, it "floods"every time when it rains hard, doesn't drain quickly enough. m.ruclips.net/video/i_jXvxLIZkQ/видео.html
@@Paulzimmermanroses thank you Paul, I'll plant them today without any fertilizer. What a peace of mind you provided. I always thought that we needed to plant with it. Have a great day!
Hoping someone's still around, can I ask something please. What if planting the bud union too deep would make the scion root itself and thus separate itself from the grafting point? I know this happens in grafted grapevine, just want to know how roses do. Will wait for any rational answers. Thanks!
Hi i really really need help :( . I bought two bags of chicken manure pellets 25kg each bag, and i already had bark wood mulch on top of my garden soil so i couldn't dig the manure into the soil so i just placed in on top of the bark mulch in my garden to replace the nitrogen in the soil. & i thought it would be ok to let the rain & watering to brake up the manure & it will slowly with the water manage to go under the mulch. In a months time i have a order of bare root roses coming. the garden looks like its has a layer of mud with some bark mulch sticking out & now i have maggots in the manure now too :( . Did i do wrong? Im really worried that my bare root roses will die for me once i plant them in November in the garden. Do you think they will be ok for me and the manure will manage to make it to the soil underneath with the rain? please please help :(
+AngelHeart It would be best to dig the manure in. It will probably take a while to break down this way. Ideally you want to get the manure between the ground and the mulch. Can you go ahead and turn the soil mulch and all and then re-mulch?
I tried forking it in a bit but it still shows. Hoping by November when the bare root roses come everything will dry. Because it will be hard planting with manure sticking to the gloves. No i cant turn the soil the garden is already prepared and cant add more mulch. I just did last winter and its still with large bark chips... Do you think my bare root roses will be ok planted in this mix? :(
Hi, i purchased couple bare root roses on ebay. I planted it in the ground. but 2 months later. 1 plant in bud, but the other cane still green and no sign of new growth yet. Any help?
auntiefurball May might be okay but much past that can be iffy. Depends on the temperatures. If they are still cool with some overcast you should be okay.
Hi this is Tracee I've watched all ur videos and have a quick question I was told I could use Epsom salt to help my climbing Joseph's dream coats to produce better and helps the canes is this true?
I bought and planted my bare root rose 3weeks ago at the time it had new growth since I planted the new growth died and none have come up since . How long will ur take for it to settle and to c new growth ?
Ask 100 different people and you'll get 100 different answers!! That is so subjective. For me an old rose called Yolande De Aragon is among the most fragrant.
That's a strange one. That does not sound like overwatering but I would cut back on the watering just in case. You might also try posting some photos on my discussion forum. paulzimmermanroses-com*forum. Just replace the "-" with a . and replace the "*" with a / That would really help.
@@Paulzimmermanroses if i buy in the winter time in the u.s, and bring it to a country which they are in summer month, how can i protect them from drying up.
@@hermon1415 As you are traveling make sure they are wrapped in damp paper and sealed in a plastic bag. When you get home hydrate them by putting the roots in water for about 48 hours. What I would then do is don't plant them directly in the ground. Instead pot them in pots and keep them in a place where they get morning sun and afternoon shade. Do that for 2 months or so until they have a full sized rootball and then plant them in the ground.
Holy cow, I think i have a geen thumb now, that climbler i was telling you about is the most beautiful thing i have ever grown. Last year i started tucking and tying large canes to the center of the bush. This year i am rewarded with masses of blooms. It looks like a giant red pom pom. Thank you again!
This is by far the best I’ve ever seen. Strange RUclips algorithm does no show brilliant videos 😩 thanks very much. I’ll share this video on different social media platforms.
Thank you!
Thanks for the vids, you've taught me alot. I live in Texas so there are alot of "conditions" you have to deal with. A friend dug a up a climber and asked me if I wanted it. I said yes thinking it was a lost cause, but a good learning experience. First year the thing sulked. Second year I got a few flowers. Third year, heat wave and I thought it died so I cut it to the ground. This year, its chock full of new growth, all because you're a great teacher. I saved a climber! Thanks
I finally got a Chris Dior Hybrid tea Rose before my old one finally dies. It came bare root and looked so dry . Some roots fall out already. I followed what you said unpacked it and soaked for 24 hours . After....I saw some sprouts came out n young roots show. I planted it like how you illustrated . I hope it continues to grow. It’s very warm in our location . One of your member said better to heavily water it then when seems drying out heavily water it again . Just want to know this is best method to make sure of it’s successful growth.
Alicia(wife)
Paul-- Your vids are great and very informative and most all questions are answered. Most other vids I have seen are so generic they are basically all the same yet different and still not telling you enough or what you really want to know. Keep up the good work. I live in indy yes I have heavy clay and very rocky soil. And this year Im trying myfirst roses. Im trying to use the knowledge you have given in the how tos and hopefully I wont kill the roses. Thanks again for sharing.
Thanks for this video! I just bought 9 bareroot roses - six own root and two grafted - and now I know what to do with them this weekend. I've got your book and it's so helpful, but I still love your How To videos!
Thank you so much! I’m going to try ordering some roses online. Your videos are interesting, clear and fun to watch.
Glad you like them!
Thanks for the tip on how deep, thanks to this video, today I dug up and replanted my yellow rose deeper into the ground.
This is a tremendous video. No clowning around, just what you need to know.
Thank you!
THANK YOU! I've been going crazy trying to figure out how deep to plant my bareroot rose, this answered all my questions👌
Glad it helped!
I very much like how Paul gesticulates heavily as he talks. :-)
@yes350yes Thank you for the kind words and I'm glad you like them. If you have questions on your roses be sure to come see us on our rose forum. You can access via our website. There is a link on our You Tube Home page
Thank you, you answered every question I had on planting a rose!!
Yeah!
Hi Paul, thank you so much for your amazing advice online. I heard you say in one of your videos that you have horses near by, where you get all your horse manure from, please can you tell me how long do you keep the horse manure to mature, before spreading it under your roses ?
6 months or so will work.
@Bk94541 Glad you like the videos and it sounds like your new roses are off to a great start. Thanks!
all the videos I've watched all say the same thing.. to leave it above the soil level about 2 inches..I'm just seeing this video, but I buried mine a week ago to where the canes were just sticking out like u said.. & it's doing much better than my neighbor who planted HER union above the soil level! I tried to tell her lol
She should have listened to you!
Paul Zimmerman Roses that's what I said lol.. my green roses are just flourishing, as hers are wilting away!
I'm from Chicago and have been planting roses since I was a teenager. Back then I learned that you should always have the bud union under the ground level since it gets very cold there during winter. But now that I live in the Pacific Northwest I kept doing the same thing and my roses are very happy here too.
I planted 42 bare root roses and Thanks to this man I will go and cover the crown to prevent wind damage. How long does it take for the rose to start leaves then flowers. His info is great.
Joseph Ryan Thanks for the kind words! figure 3-4 weeks for leaves depending on the time of year and flowers a couple of months after that. it will vary by climate, time of year etc
Yes, you can plant them directly into pots. I've not used either of those miracle gro products, but in looking at them on-line the expand looks better. But, I would talk to someone at a local garden center who has experience with it first.
Pot plates would be good as they help with drainage. Roses don't like "wet feet" meaning the soil stays saturated long after you water them. Do you live in a rainy or dry climate.
Since you are dry I would use a soil that helps retain moisture. I always like to wait until the roses are at least a year old before I prune. And even then I do so lightly. Best time to prune is in late winter very, very early spring.
Roses like infrequent deep watering. The best thing to do is water it heavily, let it dry out somewhat and then water it heavily again. Don't give it a little water every day. Just soak it when you do and then wait until the soil is just on the dry side.
Very good information!!
Paul Zimmerman Roses I had a question. When I got my roots they were very light and I didn't plant them right away. I had to wait 5 days. Do you think they are dried out and dead? I hope there's still a chance they will grow. 😭💔😭💔
Were they sealed in a plastic bag?
Always thought roses require lots of water. I guessed wrong. Thanks for the advise.
I want one plant please can you give me to India
You are an attractive person. Thank you for sharing ☺
Think Dry.. Summer the hotest is 42 and Winter at night never gets lower then 0ºC. Will buy a pot plate for them :) . When will be the first time i can start pruning them please? Thanks so much :)
you should have created a ring to help trap the water. also making a mound to stand the root system on and stretch the roots, make sure you explain that. you make valid points except the ones i have listed
Making a ring where I live with good rains and a heavier soil can often drown a rose with standing water. I used to build the mound when I first started in roses. I stopped some 15 years ago and after planting thousands of roses without doing it have decided it's not needed. It doesn't hurt, but it's not needed.
I tried to find the forum board mentioned in the video and did not see it available any longer.
My question after watching your transplanting and bare root planting video's is this. Would it be safe to uproot a 40-60+ year old rose bushes in the late end of winter in southern NY and then stored in a garage in northern PA until early spring to be planted? I am a vegetable gardener and have no experience with roses or flowers. And am trying to save the roses from a childhood home to be replanted at a new home and am scared I could kill them.
I closed the forum down a few years back. It wasn't getting much traffic anymore.
To your question, I think you can do it. Cut them back hard and pot them up in large pots with good potting soil. Keeping them in the garage is good. Keep the soil damp but not wet until the temperature warm up and they start to leaf out. When all danger of frost is past move them outside into the sun. I would leave them in the pots for several months so they can develop a full root ball. When they've done so then transplant them into the ground. You might lost them because they are so old but I've done the same with older roses and have had success.
Hi, I got some important questions about some mail bareroot roses of Hybrid Tea rose. I really dont want them to die for me... Gonna try in pots(dont have much luck in the garden).Can i plant each of them straight into 20.3 liter pots? Have two types of compost miracle gro expand n gro & miracle gro all purpose compost.Which one should i plant them in? Or i should use half compost & half my clay garden soil? & should i get them pot plates? Thanks so much for the help :)
Hi i bought another 4 bare root roses from another plant nursery on ebay(which came with a bit twiggy growth plus mold growing). So i had to prune them all. The Tea rose roots came very dry & took over 2 weeks to brake dormitory. 1 David Austin got beautiful healthy looking growth straight away but still wilts a bit in the sun(but is doing fine). I guess because the roots didn't grow so much yet. My problem is that my last two David Austins got out very light colored weak growth. These i pruned back to 7 & 3 inches(they were bad). Canes are still green and the bud union is like a gray color and dusty but is getting better now. Got them out of the shed a few days ago & placed in the sun & they started wilting. Trying to give them 3 hours of sun a day at least... Also pinched off some leafs because i read that the rose needs to focus on the roots right now not the growth. All 4 are almost 1 month old. Do you think the roots didn't grow enough yet? What can i do for them? I really love them & don't wish to give up on them & buy new ones to replace.
Hoping that at two months old they will be healthy & happy like my first English one. Thanks :) :(
Are they in pots at the moment? Is there a reason why you are keeping them in a shed?
Yes in 23liter pots each. They were in the shed in the light because i read that they need to get used to the temp because they can get transplant shock. Yesterday & today they have been 6 hours in the sun & havent been wilting again for now. I took off lots of the leafs that were wilting so they focus on their roots. Im worried that they look light & thin.
They are The Lady Gardener & Scepter'd lsle of David Austin. Dont think they are meant to look that thin. They are the only ones which are worrying me.
AngelHeart Bareroots generally don't need to adjust so they could have been planted right away and mounded up for protection. Taking off leaves is a very good thing and will help. As to the roses looking thin, some roses just come that way and I would not worry about it. Where do you live and based on that I can give some advice as to what to do next.
Dont know that much about roses just reading & trying to learn so i can grow them for my mum. Hardiness zone is 10b +1.7 °C (35 °F) +4.4 °C (40 °F) over here. Hope they will be ok by 2 months old. :)
AngelHeart That helps a lot. Those are not cold temperatures and I would advise you keep them outdoors all the time. The exception would be if the temperature is going to get below 25 F, then I'd put them in the shed. Once you know your last danger of frost is past go ahead and plant them.
we buried a 5 gallon bucket and put dirt in it halfway to put cuttings in during the winter if we can't bury the cuttings bc the ground is frozen
Great idea!
Thanks for the new video!
It should be showing some new growth in the next few weeks. I would advise the nursery you bought it from you are having problems with it. Cut about an inch of the top of each cane and look at the center. If it's white you are fine. If it's brown that is not good.
I get why you sometimes bury the bud union, in one of your other videos...you said it could cause problems burying it...wouldn't it be better to mound up the bud union...which can be taken away in the warm weather?
What part of the country do you live in and how cold is it.
Same problem that I have.. I bought some 20 roses, panted them as you told us and about 5-6 roses died.. Same soil, same garden. The bad part is that some other 2-3 roses are slowly gone... The fact is that some 2 months ago all roses had new growth, but now they die. I water them, mulch and so on.. What can I do with the rest of them and prevent further damage?
Sir can I use little bit root hormone before planting a bare root rose?
You can but it probably won't make much difference. Rooting hormone is for getting roots to form from cuttings not really for planting a bare root rose that already has roots.
Is it not uneasier to cope with the unwanted offsprings from the rootstock on grafted roses if the onion is below the surface? Unable to cut the offspring closest to the root seems to make it easier for the unwanted rootstock offspring to regrow.
You have to dig down a bit but I don't find it any harder.
Hey Paul I love your video's...I'm new to growing Roses and I'm having issues getting my cuttings to root...I've seen your videos and blogs however so far no success...any advice on what I can do to get my cuttings to root....
Glad you like the vids and thanks! The success in rooting cuttings has a lot to do with which rose you are trying to root. Some will root easily and some are almost impossible. Post the question on our rose forum paulzimmermanroses.com/forum and we can answer it better there.
How much are you watering them? It's very easy to overwater roses.
@AshdownRoses Thank you! It makes a lot of sense.
Hi i just got my first bare root rose and wanna start planting it. The problem is that the bud union is covered in wax. and it doesnt want to come off. Can i plant it with the wax? Thanks :)
I would like to rejuvenate my New Dawn climber. I had a lot of dead would, didn’t take very good care of it only because I didn’t know how. It is in a low light , mostly morning sun. It was blooming beautifully for about 3 years. I now have lots of dead wood.
Start by taking all the deadwood out. Then see if anything new starts to grow.
2 times per week - we have here 85-86 F (30 Celsius) and plenty of sun... So? What could it be wrong? Tips for saving the roses?
question Paul:
is coffee grounds good for my rosebud and will this help keep the deers away?
Coffee grounds are good for it. I've never heard of it helping keeping deer away.
what do I do if some of my roses were not planted with the bud union under the soil? must I build up the soil to cover them now?
For now leave them. Just plant new ones that way in the future.
it take for how many days for the rose plants to stay in the box? when it arrived from the grower.thanks
I would not leave them in the box more than 48 hours. ruclips.net/video/xAEIXIQD0QU/видео.html
Hey Paul, which variety of rose is the most fragrent?
Do I need to replace all the soil 2 feet by 2 feet if the spot had old rose about 10 years?
No just amend well and try to remove as much of the old roots as you can.
Feed the soil, and it will feed the plants. Also is it wind rot or wind rock you talk about?
So I planted before I saw the video. The bud unions are jus above the mulch i threw round the base of the roses. Should I leave it be now? add topsoil, mulch?
thanx. sweet vids.
How long ago did you plant and were they bareroot or container?
I planted them 3 days ago, on monday. One is a very well rooted America climber in a container. The other is a small Don Juan, it came in a container but when I turned the pot over to get the ball out of the pot, it all fell apart and I had bare root. They are both in the ground now as I described union just above the mulch. The don Juan has leaves no buds, the America has about a dozen bud with three roses getting ready to bloom. Thank you for the videos and knowledge. :)
I think if you carefully pull them out of the ground and replant you should be fine. The container one is the one I'd be extra careful with but it sounds like it's very well rooted so I suspect you will be fine.
Hi Paul, I ordered 9 DA bare root roses, it is required to plant them with biotone to prevent good health? What do you think about bottomless planting to avoid the deep digging?
I generally plant bare root roses with no fertilizer. I'm not familiar with bottomless planting. What is it?
@@Paulzimmermanroses bottomless planting basically is raised bed method. Planting in pot, but cut out the bottom, so the roots will grow into ground soil eventually. It works best to avoid root rot. I got inspired by this gardener, and did a bunch in my backyard since it's the lowest spot, it "floods"every time when it rains hard, doesn't drain quickly enough.
m.ruclips.net/video/i_jXvxLIZkQ/видео.html
@@Paulzimmermanroses thank you Paul, I'll plant them today without any fertilizer. What a peace of mind you provided. I always thought that we needed to plant with it. Have a great day!
Hoping someone's still around, can I ask something please. What if planting the bud union too deep would make the scion root itself and thus separate itself from the grafting point? I know this happens in grafted grapevine, just want to know how roses do. Will wait for any rational answers. Thanks!
It won't separate itself but quite often the rose will become an "own root rose". Personally I feel that is a good thing.
Thanks so much for the help :)
I live in NM an its been about 55-70
Hi i really really need help :( . I bought two bags of chicken manure pellets 25kg each bag, and i already had bark wood mulch on top of my garden soil so i couldn't dig the manure into the soil so i just placed in on top of the bark mulch in my garden to replace the nitrogen in the soil. & i thought it would be ok to let the rain & watering to brake up the manure & it will slowly with the water manage to go under the mulch. In a months time i have a order of bare root roses coming. the garden looks like its has a layer of mud with some bark mulch sticking out & now i have maggots in the manure now too :( .
Did i do wrong? Im really worried that my bare root roses will die for me once i plant them in November in the garden. Do you think they will be ok for me and the manure will manage to make it to the soil underneath with the rain? please please help :(
+AngelHeart It would be best to dig the manure in. It will probably take a while to break down this way. Ideally you want to get the manure between the ground and the mulch. Can you go ahead and turn the soil mulch and all and then re-mulch?
I tried forking it in a bit but it still shows. Hoping by November when the bare root roses come everything will dry. Because it will be hard planting with manure sticking to the gloves. No i cant turn the soil the garden is already prepared and cant add more mulch. I just did last winter and its still with large bark chips... Do you think my bare root roses will be ok planted in this mix? :(
Hi, i purchased couple bare root roses on ebay. I planted it in the ground. but 2 months later. 1 plant in bud, but the other cane still green and no sign of new growth yet. Any help?
Could you please post a few pictures on my FB account. That would help. facebook.com/paul.zimmerman.roses/ Thanks!
Hi Paul, is late May/June too late to plant bare root roses in Portland, OR? Thanks.
auntiefurball May might be okay but much past that can be iffy. Depends on the temperatures. If they are still cool with some overcast you should be okay.
Hi this is Tracee I've watched all ur videos and have a quick question I was told I could use Epsom salt to help my climbing Joseph's dream coats to produce better and helps the canes is this true?
Yes it is. About 1/2 a cup should help.
Is it true Vitamin B1 may help the root?
nice
Wind rock. The winds "rock" the plant back and forth and pull it loose from the soil.
One question....Does every rose plant has a bud union?
No, they don't. Only the ones that are grafted or budded onto rootstock. Grafting and budding are the same thing as it pertains to your question.
Paul Zimmerman Roses Plz check out the first rose grown by me
s11.postimg.org/xyps5kowj/IMG_20140402_122203.jpg
Do you remember which video I said it could cause problems?
Not clear what to do with a bareroot rose which has put quite a lot of white new growth which can burn in the sun!?
Generally that white growth will turn green when it's put out in the sun.
@@Paulzimmermanroses in zone 7b it burns in Spring
I bought and planted my bare root rose 3weeks ago at the time it had new growth since I planted the new growth died and none have come up since . How long will ur take for it to settle and to c new growth ?
Ask 100 different people and you'll get 100 different answers!! That is so subjective. For me an old rose called Yolande De Aragon is among the most fragrant.
very knowledgeable! What would I do without you... oh yeah kill my rose plant.
That's a strange one. That does not sound like overwatering but I would cut back on the watering just in case. You might also try posting some photos on my discussion forum. paulzimmermanroses-com*forum. Just replace the "-" with a . and replace the "*" with a / That would really help.
how to plant a bareroot rose during summer ?
You would plant it like you would at any other time. But generally bareroot roses are not available in the summer.
@@Paulzimmermanroses if i buy in the winter time in the u.s, and bring it to a country which they are in summer month, how can i protect them from drying up.
@@hermon1415 As you are traveling make sure they are wrapped in damp paper and sealed in a plastic bag. When you get home hydrate them by putting the roots in water for about 48 hours. What I would then do is don't plant them directly in the ground. Instead pot them in pots and keep them in a place where they get morning sun and afternoon shade. Do that for 2 months or so until they have a full sized rootball and then plant them in the ground.
@@Paulzimmermanroses thank you for the information.
:-)
leaving the roots in water for 48-72 hours is FAR TOO LONG! 4 hours is ideal.. 24 HOURS MAX
I've never had a problem with 2-3 days but if less works better for you go for it.