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Five ways to grow better roses

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:31:05

Coaxing roses to produce a spectacular floral display is easy, if you follow a few simple rules. Learn more about deadheading, pruning, feeding and staking your roses, below.With a bit of care and attention, you can encourage your roses to flower


How to prune a rambling rose

By Gardeners' World on 20/07/2011 16:27:49

be tied in ready to flower next season. Rambling roseSecateursLong-handled loppers early July - early August 1 hour per rose (approximately)JuneCut back the flowered stems of rambling rose right down to the base of the plant. Alternatively prune back


How to prune a shrub rose

By Gardeners' World on 20/07/2011 16:29:06

Follow Monty Don's video advice on pruning shrub roses, including techniques that will keep fungal infection and viruses at bay, while encouraging flowering stems.springMore advice on growing rosesPlanting a rosePlanting a rambling rose against a


How to plant a bare-root rose

By Gardeners' World on 20/07/2011 16:20:19

of them. Bare-root rose plantSpadeForkBamboo caneGranular fertiliser, such as chicken manureDecember - mid-March 20 minutes for each rose June - AugustDig out a hole in the soil to the depth of a garden spade and the same width. Put the soil to one side


Hybrid musk roses

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 12/09/2011 17:36:15

usually clever and had a fair bit of time on their hands (rattling off a pithy sermon, visiting the odd parishioner and pitching up for matins and evensong on a Sunday were not particularly onerous tasks). Pemberton and his sister grew about 4,000 roses


Growing sweet peas

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 20/06/2011 17:47:30

The sweet pea is a British favourite; not quite as popular as the rose but definitely up there in the top five. However, while there are numerous songs and poems about roses, the poets and wandering minstrels have been a bit sluggish when it comes


Leafcutter bees

By Pippa Greenwood on 23/10/2008 11:35:41

I always get a real thrill when I find the telltale marks of the leafcutter bee on the leaves of my roses and wisteria. Sometimes I catch them in action, cutting out a circle of leaf, or flying around carrying it. It doesn't bother me to find plants


No fly zone

By Richard Jones on 31/10/2007 09:16:49

On Saturday I turned over a rose leaf that appeared to be stuck up with a mass of silky threads to reveal a bizarre furry blob - the wingless female of the vapourer moth, Orgyia antiqua. Well, she's not completely wingless, she has tiny vestigial


Valentine's Day flowers

By Kate Bradbury on 11/02/2011 13:18:56

It's Valentine's Day on Monday. Walking past a local florist yesterday I spotted buckets of red roses, sunflowers, gerbera and iris. It's incredible to think that in one of the most dreary months of the year, we can decorate our homes


Night-scented plants

By Pippa Greenwood on 16/07/2009 11:14:03

A perfume-filled balmy evening in the garden is heaven on earth. I've always felt that perfumed plants provided an added bonus - scent plus beauty - as who can help but feel a wash of pleasure when experiencing all that a rose-clad arbour has


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