icNortheast - IF you want to make the most of your blooms, propagating roses can be the answer.
Home Style logo
ChronicleLive gazettelive.co.uk JournalLive Sunday Sun nebusiness.co.uk Jobs Homes Cars
Search icNortheast for:
Homemaker arrow Find a Home | New Homes Map | Homemaker Directory | New Homes Search | Property News | Home Style | Homemaker Gallery | Your Money | Classified Property Search | Letting Agents | Living Awards | Commercial Property | Move Planner | Overseas Homes | Price Check     
Home Style

Interior and Garden ideas for your home from the Tees Valley and the North East of England.


IF you want to make the most of your blooms, propagating roses can be the answer.

Jul 3 2008

by Karen McLauchlan, Evening Gazette

 

Taking rose cuttings is a really easy process as they will grow on their own roots.

You can root the softwood cuttings in the open ground on a spare patch of land in early summer.

The cuttings should be about 15-20cm (6-8in long).

The advantage of a rooted cutting is the absence of suckers - all shoots belong to the variety being grown.

Choose healthy stems of the current season’s growth and take off the lower leaves, leaving the bottom two-thirds of the stem bare. Use a sharp knife to trim off the bottom of the stem just below a leaf joint.

Nip the growing tip out of the shoot, as the tips of rose cuttings are very soft and likely to develop fungal disease.

Dip the base of the cutting into hormone rooting powder before placing it into well prepared ground.

Take more than one cutting in case some don’t succeed and leave a space of at least 15cm (6in) between each.

If you are putting them straight into the ground they will need protecting with a mini cloche or a soft plastic drinks bottle cut in half. This will help build up the humidity underneath.

Alternatively, place four or five cuttings into a 20cm (8in) pot filled with seed compost and cover the pot with a large, loose polythene bag after watering them in. They can be kept in a shady spot and the compost should be kept moist.

As soon as the rose cutting starts to grow new leaves - usually a sign of rooting - then gradually take the cover off and grow the plant on as a normal potted shrub.

Your cuttings should be well rooted by the autumn and rose plants can then be potted up individually, to be planted out probably next summer. If you plant them out before then, you risk them being smothered by weeds or being trodden on and snapped.

You can wait until later in the year to propagate roses, taking hardwood cuttings in early autumn. Rooted outdoors, they should provide young plants after a year.

Remember to look after your stock once you have increased it. Now is the height of the flowering season but also the time when pests and diseases turn up to ruin all your hard work.

Watch out for blackspot, which looks like ink spots on the leaves and can destroy your roses. Mildew and rust can also be disastrous for roses and spraying may be the only solution.

However, there are so many disease-resistant types of rose on the market now, it’s worth investing in a few to give you blemish-free, glorious roses in future.

WHAT TO DO THIS WEEK

Plant out bulbs of cannas and lilies potted up earlier in the season.

Remove the growing points from early peas which have finished flowering to concentrate energies on pod production.

Boost gladioli with a liquid feed every two weeks from now through to the first appearance of the flower.

Plant De Caen anemone corms under cloches for flowering in the autumn and winter.

Deadhead border plants that have finished flowering, such as lupins, to prevent them from setting seed and encourage them to produce a second flush of blooms later in the year.

Pot up rooted basal cuttings of delphiniums taken last month.

Propagate strawberries from the plantlets that form on the runners. Plunge pots of compost into the ground and peg the plantlets down into the pots with bent wire. You can cut them from the main plant when they have rooted well.

Continue cutting back rock plants such as alyssum, aubrieta and helianthemum immediately after flowering, before they have had time to set seed.

Layer low-growing branches of chaenomeles, cotinus and magnolia now for good propagation results.

Continue to sow quick-growing salad crops such as lettuces, radishes and spring onions.

During dry weather raise the cutting blades on your lawnmower and mow without using the grass box so that the clippings help retain moisture.

Thin established seedlings of herbs such as chervil and dill to 15-30cm (6-12in) apart, according to the eventual spread of the plants.

 

Top Top | Back Back |

E-mail to a friend | Printable version

 
Find A Home

Find a Home

Search online for homes for sale, houses, properties and flats »
New Homes

New Homes

Search for new homes in the Tees Valley & the North East »
Move Me

Move Planner

Use our free move planner and take away all the stress of moving home »

Home Style

The Scandi look

Look to the icy north for inspiration

BABY, its cold outside. Now we’re into cold and dreary January it’s important to think of ways to warm up our homes. Read

A riot of colour

Create a riot of colour

THE New Year is the perfect time to consider which flowers to grow from seed to create a riot of colour in the months ahead - and there is no shortage of new varieties. Read

Top tips for winter plumbing and heating

IT’S not just Christmas and New Year - going away at any time during winter can cause problems with your home’s plumbing and central heating system, especially when it’s so cold. Read

Oh Christmas tree... Dec 13 2008
It’s time to decorate your home for the festive season. Clare Jobson has some style tips for a fabulous look. more

Gifts for gardeners Dec 6 2008
There’s a huge range of gifts for garden enthusiasts. Hannah Stephenson makes a few suggestions. more

Luxe living Dec 6 2008
Even in harder times, quality can prove its worth in longevity, says Clare Jobson more

Christmas candles

Light the festive flames

IT’S the time of year when we want our homes to look their very best ready for Christmas. And that can mean making a few choice purchases in order to spruce up some rooms. Read

Glass bird feeders

Gifts for the green-fingered

WITH Christmas fast approaching, what are the best gifts to get for green-fingered members of the family? Read

Property Clinic

My boyfriend and I have just moved into our first flat and as I have never put up a Christmas tree before I would like some advice. Where do I start? Read

Pots of colour Nov 22 2008
Despite the winter, you can still brighten up your patio areas with colourful containers, as Hannah Stephenson explains. more


 


Copyright and Trade Mark Notice
© 2009 owned by or licensed to NCJ Media Limited.
icNortheast™ is a trade mark of NCJ Media Limited.
Please read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Statement before using this site.
 

 homemaker directory

Browse promotions and offers from local retailers, suppliers and services

Home Services »

Home Furnishings »

Interior & Exterior Design »

Doors & Windows »

Financial Services »

New Homes

The latest New Home developments for sale in Newcastle and surrounding areas in association with Smart New Homes »


Overseas Homes

Buying Abroad? Visit the UK's leading independent source - Homes Overseas. Helping people buy dream homes since 1965 »



Compare and switch your gas and electricity suppliers
Home Energy: Compare and switch your gas and electricity suppliers »


New Homes

Homemaker Gallery: Take a tour around some of the most beautiful homes and villages in the North East »


New Homes

Home Style:The latest interiors and gardening news, features & reviews from the homemaker »