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Planting, Growing, and Caring for Roses
Recipes
Cooking Notes
The tart reddish-orange hips of rugosa roses are used for jams, jellies, syrups, pies, teas, and wine. Check out our Rose Hip Jam recipe.
Rose petals are edible and can be tossed into salads for color, candied to decorate cakes, or distilled to make rose water. Make sure the rose petals are pesticide free.
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Hi Rebecca,
As with any insect pest, it is vital to know what you are dealing with. First, know the pest—what is chewing on your rose leaves? Timing of treatment application depends on when that insect is vulnerable (larval stage? adulthood? etc.) Prevention is the best approach. If you can coat leaves with horticultural oil or canes with dormant oil at the right time, you limit the pest’s access to the plant. There are a few soap-based products on the market that could possibly be applied now, but again, know the insect you are targeting in order to choose the right product.
I also have two beautiful orchid plants I bought from uk. I bought them as they are . Just cut off their some larger roots. And reported within 3 days. One has lost all leaves and the other has leaves. Will they survive in India. Initially kept them inside with partial light but now I have kept them outside where no direct sun. It's in balcony on a shelf .will they survive and the one which has no leaves left will this grow from root
Orchids can be tricky—both in terms of timing and soil medium—both are critical for a successful transplanting. In terms of their chances of survival, there is no sure answer. It sounds like you have located them in a good place. Make sure they are in pots with room enough to accommodate healthy root growth, and keep up with the maintenance. Only time will tell!
I have a standard rose ,flowers well,but has a lot of dead twigs,do I cut them or leave, I don't want to kill the rest of the rose, Iive in Scotland weather never the same for two days. Thank you
Yes, always remove dead (or dying) rose canes. Cut them back to the main graft (unless there is green growth; i.e. the stem is not quite dead, in which case cut back to a healthy set of leaves.)
How do you bring back a rose bush that died.
I am sorry to report, Dan, that a dead rose shrub will not come back. However, sometimes what appears to be dead aboveground is still alive underground. Leave it in the ground for the growing season to see if it sends up some new shoots. If so, let them grow, and water and fertilize regularly. In the meantime, perhaps you should buy a new rose that will bloom this year, as the other certainly will not (should it still have a living root zone).
I recently acquired a rose tree for my birthday (mustard and ketchup variety). When received in May it was loaded with blooms and kept on producing blooms. I now have it planted in a large pot with good loose soil (lots of peat moss and vermiculite). I also fertilized with an osmocote fertilizer. I received it around May 8. It bloomed prolifically for about a month and now has just stopped producing any blooms. Can you tell me if this is normal or if I need to do something different to sustain blooming. Other than no blooms it appears very healthy.
Did the plant come with any guidance (a plant tag)? Have you contacted the sursery from whom the plant was acquired?
For such a particular plant we have little particular advice. It may simply be that the plant is adjusting its new 鈥渉ome.鈥 That’s normal; a lot of plants appear to rest or evne decline after the transplant stage as they adapt to the new environment. If possible, contact the source just to be certain. At least, give the plant some time.
A friend has several rose bushes and since they have been planted, they have ceased to blossom. He feeds and waters regularly.
He is asking for some tips on how to get them to bloom!