Ordering roses for Spring 2019...do you pot up your new arrivals?
6 years ago
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- 6 years agolast modified: 6 years ago
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OK to pot up new arrivals?
Comments (4)You should be just find potting them up, Thats what all the nurerys do when they receive their bare root roses a mixture of pine fines and potting soil will be all you need. You should be able to find the pine fines at home depot. This mixture will allow the rose to grow, 50/50 mixture should be fine. Hope this helps. Harold...See MoreWhat do you do when your mail order starter roses arrive?
Comments (11)Nope, you guys missed a VERY important step. The very first thing you do with new mail order bands after taking them out of the shipping box and taking off any shipping paraphenalia is to fill a garbage can to the point where the water will completely cover the whole plant and to submerge it for 30 minutes to an hour. The point here is to kill any critters that came with your plants, especially of the spider mite variety. It also rehydrates everything that dried out during shipping. Then I keep them in the band pots in the shade for a couple of days and then, when I have time, I pot them up to one gallon pots. No fertilizer in the one gallon pots until you see they are established and growing well....See MoreNew bands arrived: plant or pot them up?
Comments (7)I just got in a shipment from Vintage Gardens. Some had nice think canes and really looked like they needed the 3 gallon pots. I potted these up. Others were very small with thin canes and looked like they even needed to stay in their band pots a while longer. These, I put in the greenhouse. They just looked too frail to have to deal with the colder weather we are getting. We are in the low 30's at night, sometimes down to 28. Think I will watch these carefully and let them grow in their band pots until after the holidays are over - then mix up a good potting mix and put them in gallon pots and leave them in the greenhouse, putting them out on any nice warmer days we might have. This is Texas after all - so 70 degree days in January are not out of the question. I got a shipment in a few weeks ago from Vintage - potted them all up in gallons and left them outside and some of those are even putting out a bit of new growth, so think they are fine. In San Antonio, you all will get warmer weather quicker than I will - I think you are wise to let them stay in the greenhouse until mid/late February. Don't forget to let them acclimate to weather outside the greenhouse but putting them out a few hours a day before you get ready to plant them out. You will enjoy watching them grow in the greenhouse - I also start daylily seeds in the greenhouse during the winter. Judith...See MorePotting up 'NEW' own root and/or budded roses.
Comments (1)George, as always, thank you for sharing your knowledge. I just wanted to let you know I read all of your posts and copy them to keep for use when needed. You give us newbies hope that we, too, may one day be knowledgeable enough to grow and/or propagate beautiful roses! Thanks again, Julie...See MoreRelated Professionals
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