Blooming Roses, Just In Time For The Easter Bunny.

Andrea's Summer pruning her roses this weekend
Here’s how to get your roses blooming again before this guy arrives!

Fun fact, did you know your roses will be blooming again 42 days after you have given them a trim?

Let me start by saying I would never profess to being an expert rosarian, but I do love roses and have been admiring and growing them in Perth for years. I have had very good success selecting just the right ones and caring for them for my clients as well.

I am just like everyone else in the garden, sometimes I have great success and other times not so much. Here’s what has worked for me.

Now the worst of our Summer heat is over – and let’s face it, this year has been horrible (all that dry heat backed up by a hefty dose of humidity). It is time to give my roses a bit of a trim. This “Summer Prune” will be more than just deadheading which I usually do to encourage more blooms when the flowers are spent.

In Perth, I am now having better success by doing the big traditional rose prune at the end of August and even sometimes mid September, rather than July. This results in a fabulous Spring flush of big healthy rose blooms. I love that time of the year. I am rewarded for my efforts. I give them plenty of Mature Compost, say 4 hands full per rose and a regular application of fertiliser that is low in Nitrogen and higher in Potassium. In addition, I give them Seasol and Powerfeed every 2-3 weeks. This regime keeps the soil healthy and the plants love it. That’s my Spring and it is really gorgeous in my garden.

The Summer months are very harsh on plants here at my place and the roses tend to spot flower only, despite my best efforts. Sometimes just when they are about to bloom we will have a 40 degree day and they will literally shrivel up in an hour or two. I am learning to live with that. I enjoy them for the day they bloom and then deadhead them about day 3 and just focus on keeping the plants alive with water, Seasol and Powerfeed, https://www.seasol.com.au/ as well as a wettting agent, like Grosorb.

It is 42 days and counting to the Easter long weekend, which is about the right number of days from trimming the roses to blooming again. So, can you guess what I am doing this weekend?

Easter is a big deal at our place. I think it is by far my favourite holiday in the calendar.

My Easter table…alfresco dining in Perth is always our Easter tradition

We actually have more days off with all of the Public Holidays at Easter-time than we traditionally do at Christmas. At Christmas, in the middle of Summer, we race around the shops, trying to find the perfect gifts for everyone and prepare the perfect meal all at once, as well as catching up with friends and family. It is mayhem.

Easter takes on a much more relaxed feel and the weather is so much kinder on people and plants! It is a lovely time for entertaining with friends and family. My garden takes on a softer feel, the sun is not as brutal, the mornings are cooler and the days are still spectacular.

Gifts are kept to a minimum too with a few chocolate eggs and yes, there will be cake, but it’s really about the decoration of the home and garden that I get a kick out of.

This is David Austin ‘Jubilee Celebration’ in my garden last Easter

In preparation for Easter, I will be giving my roses a good trim this weekend, I will be “Summer pruning” my roses. “Summer pruning” describes going just a bit lower than you would normally deadhead.

The shrubs will be reduced back under the next union from where I have deadheaded through the Summer months.

If there are any plants with defoliated leaves, which can happen in the Summer, I will not be cut back those too hard.

I will be adding Mature Compost https://www.swanvalleylandscapesupplies.com.au/ around the base of each plant, and I will be giving them some fertiliser. I will make sure that they are getting plenty of water as we still have not had any rain.

I will check on the lupin straw mulch and top it up, where required and offer a wetting agent like Grosorb, https://www.baileysfertiliser.com.au/products/category/wetting-agents/ Grosorb before the mulch goes on top.

Some of my containers need a little work too. They are looking a bit sad after Summer and I will re-visit them with some fresh plants. Who needs an excuse to go plant shopping? Not me.

A little preparation now and around Easter many of my roses will be flowering their heads off again. I can’t wait. They will flower all the way through to June and even into July.

This weekend, will you be Summer Pruning to enjoy blooming roses soon? You know that I will be, and of course, if you need some advice contact me here.

These roses are ready for their Summer Prune

Get Into The Garden Again, It’s Autumn

My Autumn garden is ready for a bit of a trim now that the weather is cooler

Thank the good Lord above that the sun has turned down from a High/Extreme to Medium heat this past week here in Perth and you can feel the change in the air. You can step outside without feeling like you have stepped into a blast furnace without protection. It has been a brutal Summer.

The mornings are darker for longer and the breezes a little stronger and while the days are still warm it is nothing like the blast furnace we have experienced this past Summer. It has been one of the hottest on record. The magpies have changed their song to a definite and more tuneful warble.

My poor garden is still recovering, not to mention the poor gardener who tends it! Despite all of the mulching, the soil wetter and the mature compost as well as the application of Yates Droughtshield https://www.yates.com.au/yates-2-5l-waterwise-droughtshield/ I have to say that my garden is not at its best…it looks well, parched!

My roses are OK (just) but I have purposefully removed the flowers and focussed on keeping the shrubs trimmed and thriving through the heat in the hope of a decent Autumn flush. The chili thrip has been kept at bay, for the most part, using a combination of water over the leaves in the mornings on the hottest of days, application of Seasol Powerfeed https://www.seasol.com.au/product-category/powerfeed-home-garden/ and removing affected leaves and flowers.

Continue reading “Get Into The Garden Again, It’s Autumn”
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