Save to move roses in the fall in zone 5?
mxk3 z5b_MI
last year
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Moving need to move roses in zone 5
Comments (1)I think you could definitely heel in your roses over winter at your new home. I included a link for a few ways to hold on to bare root roses, which is kind of what they will be when you dig them up for transport. I would cut the canes down to 1-2 feet to make them easier to handle and you can lay them in a trench...make sure you cover them with plenty of mulch and plant as soon as the ground is workable in the spring so that new tender roots aren't damaged when they are moved. Watch for heaving during the winter to make sure the roots stay covered with soil or mulch. Another option would be to trim the canes and pot up these roses in nursery containers and overwinter in a sheltered area outside (covered with a pile of leaves/straw mulch), in an unheated garage or basement, or even put the pots in a trench and cover with soil and mulch until spring. If you do pot up and overwinter indoors, I've used a black garbage bag over small potted rose starts to help keep light from triggering weak foliage growth...make sure you cut a generous ventilation hole in the top. If they are healthy, established roses, they should survive the transition fine :) Here is a link that might be useful: heeling in bare root roses...See MoreShrub Rose with Fall Color in Zone 5 or less
Comments (7)I think I am going to focus on the Rugosa family of roses since almost all of them get a good reliable fall color. Thank you for the suggestions so far. How about a suggestion for one that is: 3-4" tall and wide and tends to maintain a more "uniform" shape? I'd like one that is a heavy everblooming variety as well. Similar to what the knockout can do. Seems like alot of them have one heavy flush then bloom sporadically. I think Wildberry Breeze Rugosa will be good, but not sure about the blooms. A small grouping is going to be used as a backdrop to a ginkgo tree with a low spreading speciman in the front of the tree(like a prostrate pine)....See MoreMoving roses in MI zone 5
Comments (4)Brighton isn't too far from me. I'm in St. Clair Shores and my ground is just starting to freeze. You should be OK to dig. Bury them as deep as you can and make sure you put markers all around them so you can find them next spring when you want to dig them out. I buried some seedling pots one year and didn't mark them well enough. When I went to dig them out I sliced one in half with the shovel!...See MoreBest time to move a rose in zone 4 or 5?
Comments (10)Yes, move them now. I always move my roses as soon as the ground can be broken. I move as much dirt as possible with them. That way, they don't even know they have been moved and take right off again. I moved 2 A Shropshire Lad in mid March. They were right up against the house. I moved them to a different spot up next to the house. They are now putting out new canes like they had never been disturbed. Rebecca...See Moremxk3 z5b_MI
last year
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