Valuable Tips on how to plant a Rose
Sunday, February 5th, 2006If you really want to see your rose bloom with unique glory the first and foremost thing you need, is to choose with utmost care the site where you would like to grow them. Having found an ideal site proceed to employ most appropriate techniques that are exemplary in a given climate.
The rose with bare root and no soil is quickest to grow and gives you maximum satisfaction..The site needs to be such where proper amount of sun rays, air flow and rich productive soil are found. As flowers require direct sun light for nearly six hours a day, although, they should be protected from the scorching sun rays during hot summers. They need a place where air has smooth circulation as it helps leaves to dry soon after heavy showers. Similarly the fertile soil keeps the base compact and drains water very fast.
Roses require certain measure of depth to grow in full bloom. They have parts like root stuffs, flourishing canes and graft o¬nions. Graft o¬nion is a meeting point for other parts and looks like hump, it needs to be planted 10 to 16 centimeter deep in the soil if site climate tends to be colder and mercury falls below 10 degree F. If the temperature is 20 degree F or above then this hump could be kept a bit higher from the surface of the land. In order to plant it properly you have to be careful to keep root wet and cool as you proceed to dig hole for the sapling, which must be made as deep as can accommodate the graft inside the soil or slightly above as may be required. It is also advisable to make the hole horizontally as wide as can help roots spread freely without any hindrance that may bend them. Place the soil removed from the hole in a wheelbarrow. Use the soil removed from the hole to make a suitable mixture of highly sandy and weighty clay soil. This type of soil becomes more productive if mixed with compost, composted bark and composted manure each almost in equal proportion.