Don't Deadhead These Roses
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
Deadheading roses (removing spent blooms) is a great way to encourage faster repeat flowering. At the same time, it gives the gardener a good chance to clean up and prune the shrub back into shape throughout the season. There are, however, some roses that don't benefit as much (if at all) from deadheading: old garden and species roses that only bloom once anyway so no amount of deadheading will encourage more blooms. In this video I'll show the technique on solitary and cluster-flowering roses, and also discuss some of the roses you might just "skip" when it comes time.
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Пікірлер: 100
The rose farm is looking so good.
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
I didn't know about the three leaf-five leaf cutback! Thankyou!
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
Most welcome!
@Max-nt7ho
Ай бұрын
I learnt that from 1 of Jason’s videos few yrs. ago. 😊 Very useful info, big help. Thx a bunch, Jason! 👍🏼
Thank you! Your videos are so incredibly helpful! You truly ease the minds of us rosebush novices! I "take" you out in the garden with me (via my phone) as I remove the deadheads and attempt to properly prune, water, and fertilize the bushes! 🤣Thank you so much for keeping it so simple for us rosebush laypersons!🌹🌹🌹
Thank you very much. You inspired me to buy roses for my garden. Big “ Danke Schön” from Germany.
You're the man! These videos are great!
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
Thanks so much!
I’ve been watching you for a year I have learned so much about roses from you please keep giving us your knowledge! Thankyou Jason🥰
Look at those clouds hitting the mountain peaks! I do pull off the petals from my cabbage and apothecary roses, because in San Diego the summer months are becoming more and more humid, and the dried petals hold moisture and encourage pests. My Reine Des Violettes, drops it's spent blooms. I'll check out that website definitely! My friend has been asking me about pruning her clematis...
Another info packed video Jason, very useful as usual 😊
You’re so knowledgeable- I feel I’m getting reliable information when I watch your videos. Thank you sir!
Thank you for this great info Jason. 😊
Beautiful roses, thanks for a great video
Awesome video Jason, thank you! Blessings!
Thank you Jason. 💐💚🙃
Good time saving information. Thanks.
Love the channel! Thank you for simply identifying what to deadhead or not. 😊
Always grateful for your advice. Tku J
Thank you Jason!
Great info, thank you!
Great advice! 🌹👍
Thank you!
Hello 👍👍👍❤🩷🩷 I don’t know how to Grown the Roses like you but I Enjoyed to watch you ! It’s so Beautiful Roses made me so Relaxing !
Thank you! I have never liked roses and just let the goats eat them... until my granddaughter asked for a rose bush! I needed a quick education and have been watching your videos all morning!
Thank you.
I've got 2 yellow Knockout roses and while they may not need dead headed they give a messy look to the plant. Since mine are right on the corner of my yard I try to keep them trimmed. Your place is looking great.
Very helpful, clear, concise video! Thank you! Blessings from the Great Pacific Northwest, Lakewood, Washington 💛🖤💛 Stacy
I have about 100 different species of roses here on my farm. Guess what I need to do tomorrow morning after breakfast? Pruning time!
Thank you ❤
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
Most welcome!
how do you keep your roses so green? Keep up the good work
I only plant repeat bloomers but since the weather has been so bad we don’t have much blooms anyways 😢
Love your videos. Was worried about having harmed my Baron Girods - But it sounds like they're just struggling where they are, instead.
I am pretty jealous of the moonlight in paris. I had it in my cart for a month and then it went out of stock before I was able to get one
Your roses look so healthy. What do you feed them and how often do you feed them?
Not related to this video, but I would love some advice on the John Cabot climbing rose and clematis I'm training over an arbor. I planted both two years ago, and they are putting on a spectacular show together. The rose has put out some substantial new canes at the base, but I have a lot already trained on the metal arbor. Would it be too much to add them, or should I prune them back, since they're growing like mad? Happy plants here in Michigan!
Hi Jason! Thanks for the useful tips! I noticed my rose leaves are being ravaged by a green worm and also white ish holes in the leaves, I am using safers 3 in 1 and wondering if I need to get something stronger- one rose has already died because I didnt get to it fast enough! Roses are beautiful and so I am willing to put the extra effort into keeping them! Blessings from Waterloo Ontario BTW I saw that you guys used to sell Evelyn DA rose- I am having a hard time finding this rose here. Are you able to offer this as a bare root? Thanks again!
Hi Jason! Thanks for this, its my first full season with about 25 roses. I blame you for introducing me to them and making me feel confident enough to care for them. I have a few that have random wild canes, I left them alone since I wanted to see the blooms. Is it okay to cut them back a foot or more when deadheading to match the height of the other canes? Also, if it seems congested in the center can I or should I defoliate during the growing season or wait until they're dormant. 9b NorCal. Thanks again!!
When do you recommend buying hybrid tea roses? We have an ‘Elle’ HTR and the smell is intoxicating but when we went back to the nursery they said that they don’t carry them anymore for the season. It’s not even summer yet…can you advise? Thanks.
Another wonderful video, Jason, thank you! If I might impose - might anyone have any recommendations for deadheading roses in their first year in the ground? I’ve put in my first four roses after falling in love with the Koko Loko rose, and they’re already beginning to bloom. Any advice would be much appreciated! 😊
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
It's a good idea to stay right on top of deadheading in the first year - to encourage a quick return to growth. I generally stop deadheading in August/Sept (timing may vary by climate) to allow the rose to "settle down" and harden off for winter
What can I use for black spots? Also, I see white flies on my roses. What should I I use?
I always enjoy your informative videos. Just a question-what is the reason for encircling the roses with old tires? TIA!
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
kzread.info/dash/bejne/p2RhxdCrf73cgtI.html
Great information 🙏❤what about David Austin roses?
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
In general they benefit strongly from deadheading.
Your roses are spectacular. I would like to know if you get japanese beetles and if so how do you treat them.
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
Not yet, knock wood.
What to put on roses to keep insects off?
Could you post a top 20 best fragrant tea hybrid roses please ?
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
Good suggestion. I'll add it to my list
Hi Jason, I’ve always cut to 5 leaflet, but what about when you encounter a random 7 leaflet? Further, what about those fast-growing shoots that ONLY have 7 leaf sets - is that a stem sucker that should be cut off at the base of the plant? It sprouts from above the graft. Thanks so much!
Regarding the 3-to-5 leaflet cutback---I've also heard & done this for years to cut just above an OUTWARD facing 5-leaflet. Recently, in talking to another KZread gardener, Jay Jay, in the UK, admiring his Olivia Rose Austin, I mentioned that my 1st year one was droopy, w/ thin stems, like his yoiunger one. He said that he deadheads severely, back to a thicker cane, for the first 2 years, & he thinks that's how his older Olivia is so upright & covered with blooms. Have you heard anything about doing this on floppy roses to encourage stronger growth? It makes some sense to me. Thanks for all your tips, so good to hear from a pro!!
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
Thanks. Yes, pruning even lower to correct any shape problem or weak stems makes a lot of sense. Getting my hands onto the roses during the seasons for a little corrective pruning is my secondary motive for deadheading. As the inward/outward, I don't pay it much attention because the plant itself often sends new shoots from several of the buds near the top of the stem - paying no attention to your "instructions".
That common rule of dead head back to where there are 5 leaves seems like it is one of those not hard and fast garden "rules". Knockouts are very busy pushing new bud growth above that 5 leaf area. Certainly walking by and snapping off spent flowers is also happening above the start of 5 leaves. Is this an area where that rule depends on which class of rose?
Hope you are doing very well. I am in zone 7a, Connecticut. Just wanted to ask you if it is too late to apply some organic mushroom compost to my established ( 2/3 years old) roses. My favorite mushroom compost was out of stock until yesterday, so I could not apply it to my roses this spring. Can I apply now?
Hi I bought a few young roses from specialty rose nursery, some of them already flower and some came with long weak branches, is it ok if I prune them quite heavily and deep to the bottom to make it grow tidy and strong, now most of the branches are weak and leaning out. Tqvm
Hi! Thank you for this video_ could you tell me particularly about Home Run Roses - whether to dead head or not? I don't want to cause die back by pruning. Thx
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
They're one of those "self-cleaning" shrub roses, so minimal effort into deadheading. You might still look at it once in a while to see if the rose needs some light shaping, etc. but plucking off the spent blooms probably isn't worth the time.
@konikacariapa3289
Ай бұрын
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm . Thank you very much for taking the time and trouble to respond. Thank you again - I will follow your advice
Hi Jason! have you done a video on fertilizer burn? ...I thought my roses were getting sunburned but now I think its fertilizer burn and I'm not sure how to fix it.
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
Lots of water to help rinse excess nutrient salts from the soil profile around the roots.
❤ls it wise to deadhead all spent blooms after re-potting to let the rose focus more on growth?😊 Thank you.
@Max-nt7ho
Ай бұрын
Re-potting or not, I believe deadheading the spent blooms should be done, imho.
The Poulsen Rose Kailani (Poulpal038) a repeat bloemer is not building any hips; so do I have to deadhead it?
Oi Jason, apresio demais seus vídeos, porém muitos deles não consigo acompanha-los não são traduzidos peço-lhe que se possível traduzi-los é uma benção para mim. Obrigada. Deus ó abençoe
Any advice for dealing with black spot? I just planted a garden bed of 20 roses this spring. They are spread apart and I have been careful in every way I know, but they all have black spot. I daily take off and dispose of the bad leaves and have started a spray. But I’m not seeing any improvement yet.
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
Some years can be tougher than others to get it under control. I'm seeing it too low down on the roses and have begin to do the same - removal and spray on the more susceptible varieties. Pruning for good air circulation can be helpful. Drip irrigation (instead of overhead) can reduce the spread. But overall it's just this: choose resistant varieties where practical, begin the season as clean as you can (with a dormant treatment like lime-sulfur) and then maintain through the early season until hopefully the conditions are less challenging.
Hello I am a bit confused with English roses apparently an agent from David Austin on phone call said English roses don’t need to follow the 5 leaves set to be deadheaded and to just remove the spent bloom … I recently got a couple of climbing roses which are young and I have the doubt as the main canes are growing vertical as the plant is too small yet to train horizontally . If I dead head to the 5 leaves set then I will almost have to cut back to the ground the rose. Could you please advise ?
does anyone know a good online shop based in Europe that sells roses?
How do you keep Japanese beetles away from your roses?
Planted roses as a new gardener. I didn’t get to trim in the fall and spring and now my roses have reddish steams. Trim this or let it grow ?
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
I might be missing your meaning, but if it's red stems, that's a natural and healthy color for new growth in roses. Unless it's poorly placed or congested, I'd want it to grow.
@jackiewhorton2063
Ай бұрын
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm thank you !!
Are there any benefits to removing the head just as it starts to form on a thin stem? Sure you will not get a bloom but will the plant redirect that energy into stem growth?
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
Yes, if you don't mind sacrificing flowers, you can do it preemptively. Some gardeners do this on newly establishing rose shrubs for the entire first year - I don't have that level of self-discipline! I want to see the flowers
@galeparker1067
Ай бұрын
🤣🤣♥️♥️♥️✌️🇨🇦@@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Hi We have the 'Pauls Scarlet Climber' rose, on the internet i'm receiving mixed information about it being repeat bloomer or not, i've tried deadheading it for two years but we didn't get any repeat blooming, helpmefind mentions 'Occasional repeat later in the season. '. What's your opinion about this rose (and it's rebloom capabilities)?
@lbetsworth355
Ай бұрын
Hi, I am just an avid fan and follower of Jason but your comment caught my attention. I have been trying for ages to find a Paul’s Scarlet. Where did you get it? Do you live in the U.S.? I’m in Ontario, Canada. I did find a nursery in Texas but I can’t import a plant into Canada.
@lbetsworth355
Ай бұрын
P.S. I believe it is a one timer.
Just a quick question...when do you prune your rose bushes back so far there are only a few bare stems left and when do you just do a clean up on a full rose bush? Little confused...thanks.
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
My heaviest pruning is in late winter (in February/March here)
@barbarafitts1775
Ай бұрын
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm So,just to clarify, you prune right down to the bare stems on all your bushes in the winter? Which ones do you decide to do that to? You have many beautiful rose bushes in your yard...do all get cut back that drasticly?Thanks
Recently, I was told not to deadhead roses in the summer. Let them rest until fall. Would you agree with that theory?
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
I don't stop deadheading until I want the shrubs to settle down their growth in August/September. The timing would vary a bit depending on where you live: in someplace warm and mild like California, there'd be no need to stop deadheading, but in someplace with an early and cold winter you might cheat forward and stop your deadheading in mid August.
What is the name of the dark pink/red rose in the front of the screen at 2:14?
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
Red Moss / Henri Martin.
when do you prune once flowering roses?
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
Right after their main flush of flowers I look to see if they need thinning, shaping & rejuvenation.
@lazarusdouvos
Ай бұрын
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm thank you Jason
Ouch I just deadhead my damask rose
Damask are repeat bloomers in Indian climate
e Hi Jason! I need your help. I created two FB gardening groups; PNW Gardener's Corner, and PNW Rose Gardener's Corner several years ago. I have 57 rose bushes in my collection and have been a hobbyist rose gardener for many many decades. Without exception, this is the first year my roses are freakishly large. Even first year rose bushes have copious amounts of dinner or bigger rose blooms. It's freaky. I have done nothing different this year. We have extensive gardens as well that are growing freakishly fast and abundant. Like never before. MANY MANY of my FB group members are experiencing the same thing. Posting pics of roses and peonies like they are from Alice In Wonderland. No one is doing anything different. I live in the north end of Seattle about 2 1/2 hours from the Canadian border. Are your rose bushes, etc doing the same thing? Most importantly, would you know what might be causing this massive growth. We had something similar last season, but this is different. I feel it must be something in our atmosphere ? The weird thing is that massive amounts of people are experiencing the same thing. From western Washington, all the way into Oregon. So, it simply cannot be do to changes in fertilizer, water, etc. Everyone's microclimate's are vastly different. HELP!
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Ай бұрын
I'd say that my roses are a little on the large side, but pretty much what I'd expect based on consistent soil moisture and quite a pleasant range of temperatures. I've seen some good results from other gardeners, but also know that we've seen our share of powdery mildew this season, and I'm hearing about a lot of losses this winter. Nothing I could place far outside the range of normal variation, so I'm afraid I won't be able to shed much light on your observations.
@galeparker1067
Ай бұрын
dancer!! ✌️. That is all SO interesting! Thank you for posting AND being curious. Maybe asking questions on the "feral foraging" channel could include a whole bunch more people..... ♥️♥️♥️✌️🇨🇦
@nancyneyedly4587
Ай бұрын
It's interesting you mentioned this. I have seen the same thing particularly on my one very old rose, completley neglected, and it has the most blooms it has ever had in 15 years. Seen some incredible roses around town this year too. I'm in the Fraser Valley as well.
@dancer2749
Ай бұрын
@@nancyneyedly4587 Any guesses as to why this phenomenon might be happening?
مسبىة كزفقة🩷🩷🩷🩷🍹🍹🍣🍣🍣🎈🎈🍹🍹🍹🍹