Rose Pruning – What You Need to Know to Get Beautiful Roses
Pruning roses is crucial if you want to grow beautiful, lush roses. Over the years, roses have been highly hybridized and cross bred in order to produce beautiful blooms. This has effected their growth habits. Today, keeping the bush size and shape appealing requires some human intervention in the form of pruning.
Pruning roses isn’t as complicated or mysterious as people make it out to be. In fact, there are just a few basic rules. If you keep these in mind whenever you pick up your pruning shears, you’ll be rewarded with beautiful rose bushes that your friends and neighbors will envy.

1) When to Prune
Pruning roses should be done in the spring, just as the leaf buds begin to swell. This is very important – it needs to be done before the season’s active growth begins. Young roses should not be pruned at all. They need to reach a strong, mature size (2-3 years) before any pruning is required.
2) How Much to Prune
To some extent, this depends on how large you want the plant to become. Roses height can get out of control without pruning. Generally, a rose bush will grow 3-4 feet over the growing season, so prune it down enough to allow for this much growth. You don’t want the bush to grow so high that you cannot see or smell the blooms at the top.
3) What to Prune
The first thing to do when you start rose pruning is to remove any dead or decayed, broken or damaged growth. Not only does this keeps your bushes looking good, but it prevents the invasion of pests and disease.
Make your cuts just above a strong leaf bud. Notice the direction that the leaf bud is growing. If left intact, that is the direction that the cane will grow in. You want to leave leaf buds that are growing in the desired direction.
Spindly canes, smaller than a pencil, will generally not amount to much. Remove these so that the plant’s energy can be directed to the larger, stronger canes. Get rid of most of the old remaining leaves. This will allow for new leaf growth and prevent fungus infections from the old ones.
4) Rose Pruning to Maintain Shape
It is a good idea to keep the center of the bush free of canes that are growing horizontally across it. This promotes good air circulation and will help avoid fungus infection. Another reason to avoid having too many canes crossing each other is that they will create a lot of leaves that shade lower branches and discourage blooms on the lower part of the plant. Rose bushes can grow into large tangled masses with small and inferior blooms.
Climbing roses only need to be pruned to contain their overall size and height or when they are growing in the wrong direction.
Continuing to shape your rose bushes as they grow is a good practice. Changing them from wild and unruly to prim and proper is the goal of pruning roses.
5) Prevent Disease
Always use sharp pruning shears when pruning roses. Clean the shears after each use to remove any disease or fungus. After pruning, any major cuts can be painted with a sealer to aid in healing and to help keep out insects and disease. Regular Elmer’s glue, diluted a bit, works fine and it is cheap.
Finally, finish pruning roses by picking up all the dead stuff you’ve cut away. You don’t want to leave infected canes on the ground to spread disease and you don’t want to be surprised later when you step on an old thorny cane. Pull the weeds from around the rose bush and finish up by placing fresh mulch around the base of the rose bush.
Correct rose pruning and shaping makes for a lovelier bush and allows for appropriate air circulation which makes for a healthier plant with larger blooms. Proper rose pruning is easy, and it is the key to a happy, healthy rose garden. Enjoy your beautiful roses.
Want to find out more about garden plant care, then visit Cindy Robles’s site for the lastest garden design news trends and inspiration.











































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