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It may not look like much now, but this properly planted tree rose will soon be a blooming beauty.

(Photo courtesy of Lynn Hunt)

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The Rose Whisperer: Getting off the ground

By Lynn Hunt | 05.04.09

Beginning today, seven different bloggers – specializing in roses, herbs, greenhouse growing, garden-related travel, and general gardening – will be writing garden posts at Diggin’ It. Usually, several different bloggers will be posting each day. So do return often to learn and be entertained. (You may want to bookmark us. The URL is http://features.csmonitor.com/gardening/blog-entry.)

First up is Lynn Hunt, an accredited horticultural judge and a Consulting Rosarian Emeritus for the American Rose Society. She has won dozens of awards for her writing in newspapers, magazines, and television. She grows roses and other plants in her garden on the Eastern Shore of Maryland:

Over the years I’ve come to realize that writing and gardening have a great deal in common. Both are solitary pursuits. Both can be extremely rewarding and incredibly frustrating. Both can foster tremendous success and smashing failure – sometimes within the same day.

There is a unique anticipation that accompanies the start of each new project, a blend of excitement and dread that comes from not knowing exactly how things will turn out. There is the endless task of editing, whether it is trimming a paragraph or shovel-pruning a disappointing rose. There are the hours of painstaking, meticulous work that others never witness.

Mostly, writers and gardeners share the challenge of starting with nothing, a blank page or a bare patch of earth, with the expectation that a mixture of creativity and elbow grease will result in something special.

Here’s hoping that The Rose Whisperer will be just such an endeavor – a combination of tales from the garden, growing tips, news from the rose world, and humor that will grow on readers.

So now that we are just getting off the ground, I decided to start my posts with the most basic of basics: the planting hole.

You see, it has been my experience that more thought is given to the rose purchase than to where the plant will eventually live. My cry of “don’t put a $20 (or maybe $30 these days) rose in a $2 hole” routinely falls on deaf ears. The result is unsatisfactory for the rose as well as the pocketbook. A properly prepared hole at least gives the plant a chance for success.

I revisited my own planting techniques recently when I said farewell to a longstanding tree rose budded with the shrub rose Sea Foam. Oh, she was a sight in her day with cascading branches covered with white blooms tinged with shell-pink. But just like those poinsettias that look jaunty and vibrant early on and then fade like an old watercolor painting, the bloom was off the rose. I had to face the fact that Sea Foam was washed up.

Before adding a replacement, I dug a hole three feet wide and 18 inches deep. Then I worked in a rose recipe my bushes appear to like:

5 shovels peat moss
4 shovels dehydrated cow manure
1 cup dolomite lime
2 cups alfalfa pellets
2 cups cottonseed meal
1/2 cup Osmocote (time-release fertilizer)

Generally, this concoction would be good for five to eight roses, but I used about half the mix to replenish the soil where the old tree rose had grown for more than a decade. Then for the piece de resistance, I threw two banana peels in the bottom of the hole. This practice goes back to the 18th century, even though rose fanciers then didn’t understand that peels would add helpful nutrients, including calcium and magnesium, to the soil.

My new rose would soon be in for a feast.

The Baby Blanket tree rose arrived and has been tucked into its new home. I placed damp moss around the bud union to keep it from getting scalded by the sun before the bush fully leafs out.

As soon as the first buds bloom, I’ll post the pictures here. And you’ll see why success with roses starts from the ground up.

Psssst: The Whisperer also recommends putting sweepings from your haircuts in the planting hole, or sprinkling them around your rose bushes. Old-timers say the nitrogen content of human hair contributes to more vivid colors and may also deter four-legged pests.

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Comments

1. Patti Lucas Hopkins | 05.04.09

Dear Rose Whisperer….I love your parallel of writing and gardening. Also, I look forward to seeing your Baby Blanket tree rose in full bloom. Thanks for the recipe. Good luck!

2. Alexandra Marks | 05.05.09

So glad you’ve joined us and I’m so looking forward to reading and learning more. (I particularly love the banana trick…!) Last June when I turned 50 my mother gave me five rose bushes, one for each decade. Wish I had your special recipe mix then. Cheers!

3. Georgianna Lane | 05.08.09

Thanks for this informative and helpful post. Will definitely be using those tricks for my next rose plantings. Best of luck!

4. Hilary | 05.18.09

Hi Lynn,

I look forward to your articles, but I did have a comment about something you said: “to replenish the soil where the old tree rose had grown for more than a decade.”

I was glad to see that because I’m sure you’re aware of “Rose Replant Disease.”

For those that are not here is a very good, short article about it:

How To Avoid Rose Replant Disease: http://www.weekendgardener.net/garden-plants/rose-replant-disease-050905.htm

Hope this helps some of your readers, have a great day!

5. Lynn Hunt | 05.18.09

Hi Hilary,

Thank you for mentioning rose replant disease. As I’m sure you know, there is some disagreement in the rose world as to whether this is a disease or if it even exists!

Those who feel certain it is a real disease aren’t sure if the problem is caused by chemicals exuded by the old rose, a soil deficiency or something to do with a specific root stock. As far as I know it is still unresolved.

As for me, I’m in the “better safe than sorry camp” and always remove old roots and about a wheelbarrow full of the old soil before adding new soil and my recipe goodies. I am especially cautious if the old rose died.

Anyway, thanks so much for writing. I’ll look forward to hearing from you again!

6. Lou Milner | 05.21.09

Interested in your comment re:Seafoam Rose. Here in Texas it is considered an Earthkind Rose …. passed rigid testing at Texas A&M for our considerably harsh weather conditions. I have had mine for at least 8 years and no black spot at all. Very vigorus. Wondered what part of the country it did not do well.

7. Lynn Hunt | 05.21.09

Lou,
Blackspot wasn’t really a problem with Sea Foam but it was declining vigor that made me decide let her go. I’d had her for about 16 years and she just wasn’t looking too good. Don’t know if the fact it was a tree rose made any difference. I’m glad yours continues to do well.

By the way, I’m on the Eastern Shore of MD.
Thanks for writing,
Lynn

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