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What I've Learned About Growing Roses in Gopher Territory

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If you don't have to contend with gophers, feel free to skip.

I would prefer to garden without dealing with gophers. Yes, I recognize they fill a valuable niche in the environment. They aerate soils and bring important things to surface. You can see a story online about researchers dropping a bunch of gophers in an area that had just had volcanic eruption, and how the plots with gophers did so much better recovering than plots without gophers. I just wish they weren't in my immediate environment. Here's what I've learned.

1) I have to protect the planting areas. I've tried gopher wire cages, two kinds. One is Digger's heavy duty wire basket, five gallon. The other is a more flexible kind that you can stretch. The gophers have chewed through those flexi ones to get to dahlia bulbs, rose roots, and veggies. Gophers have also chewed holes in the bottoms of ceramic pots, plastic/resin pots, and oak barrels if the pots are on the ground. They start with a drainage hole, I think, and then enlarge it. So I either have to plant something in a gopher wire cage/basket in the pot, or put a flattened cage under the pot. But that's not foolproof. On the barrel, they were able to shimmy between the cage and the bottom of the barrel (probably because of the wood supports on the bottom). So -- must use the gopher wire cage/basket. Five gallon size works well for my rose bushes. One gallon works well for most kinds of perennial flowers that I want to keep. In my raised veggie boxes I put what's called hardware cloth -- sturdy metal with tiny holes so you get drainage, but stronger and smaller holes than aviary or chicken wire. I put that under the box, and so far nothing has chewed through that! I tried doing that in a bed area, but the gophers went overground to get into that bed. So -- if I want to protect it, I have to put it in a gopher wire cage, a pot that's protected, or a raised bed with the wire under it.

2) Drawbacks to growing roses in gopher wire cages. Ideally, you're supposed to leave a bit of the wire exposed on top so the gophers don't just pop down into the cage from above, which I've seen them do. But this makes it challenging to pull weeds. And most challenging of all is that if you get a sucker, which Dr. Huey tends to do, you can't really get the right angle to pull the sucker off. I just dug up one of my favorite roses, a Distant Drums, because I couldn't get the sucker torn off, and it just kept regrowing and was starting to hurt the bush. So once I had it up, I planned to get it out of the wire cage so I could take care of the sucker. But Dr. Huey is so vigorous, the roots had gone well beyond the cage and were huge, so there was no way to take the rose out of the basket without probably really hurting the rosebush. So I did my best with the sucker, replanted the bush in a big pot, and will wait and see what happens now. If it suckers again from that spot, I will cut the roots off, and then take care of the sucker spot, and then re-pot it. Thankfully, I've learned that Distant Drums grows easily from a cutting, grows quite well own-root, so I won't be without the rose. But it's a shame to dig up this otherwise healthy and vigorous rose. Which is the problem with growing Dr. Huey grafted roses in a gopher wire cage!

Another drawback is I have to make a hole big enough to fit the 5 gallon cage. If I've got a big, healthy, rose bush in a 5 gallon container or a big healthy bare root, no problem. But if it's a smaller rose, then it doesn't like being in such a huge hole. I don't know why it is -- but gardeners can tell you it's better to step up plants (from 4" to 1 gallon to larger) before just plopping a small plant in a huge hole or a huge pot. I've learned the hard way that plopping my one-gallon roses, esp. own-root, in a humongous hole causes some roses to languish, or just take YEARS to really reach their potential. I've learned, therefore, to be patient and keep re-potting them. Two roses I didn't have to wait long on -- as their roots are SUPER vigorous and easily made the transitions quickly -- Eisvogel and Mill on the Floss. And Distant Drums has proved to be very good on own-roots. Some are better than others. Lilas is still a puny little rose, as is Abraham Darby.

3) Plant plants that gophers don't like. They don't like lavender or rosemary, most sages, etc. They cannot eat gopher purge / spurge / euphorbia at all (poisonous) or daffodils/narcissus. They usually avoid thyme and African blue basil -- though this year they ate a sage, my African blue basil, and other plants they usually avoid. I'm not sure if they were super hungry, or just ate it because it was in their way. And one year I planted hundreds of daffodils thinking I'd create a barrier they would not cross, but they pushed out most of the daffodils so they dried up on top of the ground, I hadn't been walking around that area for a while, so didn't notice until it was too late. Cheeky little devils.

4) Despite all my efforts, I still get gophers in my beds, where they will eat things that are protected by cages if there are tasty bits low to the ground outside of the cages (like a dahlia that had several branches going out horizontally before going up). So then I try to kill them. I don't want to use poisons, as I don't want to poison something that might eat the gopher, so I use a variety of traps. The black box traps can work well, but you have to dig up a lot to get the durned thing in position. The gopher hawks worked like a charm for the first 3 years, but this last year I'm not having much luck. I think we've selected for the smarter gophers...and there is the trusty old McAfee trap which I onetime got my thumb in (ouch!), but is not working to get the one gopher in my garden right now. I've tried three different kinds of smoke bumbs. Not only do I feel like Wile E. Coyote using them, but I'm afraid I'll burn down my neighborhood. Nevertheless, I've not seen any effect, except that I think I may have killed a mole, which I feel terrible about. I saw the gopher while I was looking out my window, and he ws just taking deep breaths. So I think he was able to close off the tunnel with the gas, then just came up later, and went right back to chewing everything up. Someone recently suggested I rub the traps with onion, as supposedly this is what they do at Lotus Land (a garden nearby). I've also used gloves so my own smell is not on the traps. I think the crows are getting impatient. I usually put any dead gophers out on a big rock so they can come and have a feast. Nothing for a while. BTW -- if you use the gopher hawk, be sure to learn how to use it properly. You can wreck it if you don't do it right. I know, as even though I showed my husband and told him to watch the video online and sent him the link, when I got back from my travels last year I had to replace all the little wire parts -- which were $5.99 each. Plus tax.

p.s. yes, I've seen Chunk the Groundhog videos. My problem with the ground squirrels and the gophers is that they eat the entire plant (squirrels from the top, gophers from below), so NO ONE gets any vegetables or flowers. I would share a carrot or green bean or rose with them -- but if they destroy the whole plant or the entire root system -- no one wins. Not even them! I DO feel bad killing them. Honestly. I cried the first few times. My husband told me to toughen up. My dad told me to cook it, and maybe I'd feel better about it, to which I replied, "I'm not Granny from the Beverly Hillbillies!"

I think that's what I've learned. Yes, my life is like Caddyshack (the Chevy Chase film). Though I haven't tried blowing the gopher up. Yet.

If you've learned something I should know, please enlighten me. If you have a trick, please share. And if you are just now encountering gophers -- I send you my deepest condolences and hope you find something here useful.

If you live in an area that doesn't get gophers -- here's a video: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8hde4a

or, if you don't care for the Hillbilly Bears and want live action: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/VVBEUvbbNX0

And here's an image/post/advice on salvaging roses from this forum: https://www.gardenweb.com/discussions/6245707/spring-rose-disaster

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