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Welcome to Rose Gardening

 

Rose Gardening Article

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This is a selection made from among articles on Rose Gardening. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Pest Control for Roses

from: Liew

Roses attract not only the praise and compliments of your friends and neighbors, but the unwanted advances of insects and animals in your area. Nothing is worse than watching your beautiful rose bushes being destroyed in their bloom after many months of hard work. There are a variety of ways to protect your investment ranging from chemical applications to natural deterrents.


Although a number of insects reside in and around rose bushes, the most destructive by far is the Japanese beetle. The infestations are short termed, but they will clean the leaves right off those delicate branches leaving a lacy pattern in what is left. Uncontrolled they can kill the bush. Many choose to spray or dust the bushes with chemicals like Sevin or Diazinon. This will kill the adults and is readily available in any home and garden center. However, these chemicals do not provide an instant kill leaving the beetle to finish its snack before dying. Also, care must be taken with application of the product and in later handling of your roses to prevent accidental ingestion of the poison. If you have a large amount of bushes, this option is often the most sensible.

For the removal of Japanese Beetles from just a few smaller rosebushes, you may simply knock them off the flower or leaf into a container of soapy water or kerosene. This is environmentally friendly and easy to do, although repetitive. Do not use the “bug bags” that are so readily available. They do attract Japanese Beetles with a pheromone and trap many inside, however they will attract many more beetles to your property than you originally had.

Obviously, the key lies in prevention and deterrence. To prevent the infestation in the first place you must control the grubs, or immature beetles, in your lawn. This is usually done in the late summer through the fall depending on your climate and may take the cooperation of your neighbors as well. There are many chemical products available for eliminating white grubs and are simply broadcast on your lawn. Environmentally friendly products would include beneficial nematodes and Milky Spore disease and are applied in a similar fashion with similar results. It may take a few years for full effect, but by eliminating the newly hatched grubs, you will be saving yourself many future headaches.

Japanese Beetles can be deterred with a number of sprays and plantings, with varying amounts a success reported. White mums, rue, tansy, citronella, garlic, and larkspur may be inter planted with your roses and are known to repel adult beetles.

Have you ever heard of edible flowers? If you live in an area frequented by deer, you know that the favorite snack appears to be roses – both buds and blooms. A bush in full bloom is a beautiful thing, but a horrendous sight to behold when every flower has been stripped right off. The tale-tell sign that deer are to blame will be the triangular shaped hoof prints around the rose bed. Deer feed in the shadows of the predawn hours which can mean catching them in the act is virtually impossible. Leaving lights on or music playing does not seem to bother them either.

There are some sprays available in pet stores and home and garden centers, but with limited effect and will often wash away with the rain. The best chance your roses have is your (or your neighbor’s) dog. More specifically, dog hair has a repellent effect on deer. Simply brush the dog, gather the clumps of hair and spread it obviously around and in the rose bed. The deer respond very quickly and do not come back. The dog hair will eventually decay and by the time it does, the deer have gotten the message.
We hope that this ending of our article on rose gardening proves to be a beginning to your interest in rose gardening! Now get down to learning more about rose gardening!

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  • Tips-on-Growing-Roses.txt(Rose Gardening Tasks Early Spring)
  • Rose Pruning Tips(LiewRose Pruning Tips )
  • Tips for cutting roses for display(JackieWhat could possibly smell or look better than a vase of beautiful rose blooms on your table or the table of someone you love? Roses, especially hybrid tea roses, are made to be cut and they can last a very long time in a vase if you follow these simple tips. )
  • Planting Roses(Put your nameYou have chosen the location for your rose bed and decided which varieties you want. Before selecting and ordering your roses, protect your investment by learning how and when to put the garden in. )
  • Enjoy Rose Gardening(Gerardas NorkusThe rose. It has been the subject of many a poem, prose and )
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    Rose Gardening News

    Rose Harvey, 95, of Huron - Plainsman

    Her body has been cremated and a memorial service will be held in the springtime. Donations may be made in Rose’s name to the Catholic Daughters of America, Court of Saint Rose of Lima No. 126; C/O Holy Trinity Parish; 425 21st St. S.W.; Huron, S.D ...

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    Gardening Guidelines To Follow For New Year - Tyler Morning Telegraph

    How was your summer electric bill? A new year's resolution might be to lower it with some strategically placed trees to shade sunny western-facing windows. Winter is a perfect time to buy and plant trees. This is a slower season for nurseries so you ...

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    Pruning, rose care workshop rescheduled - Amador Ledger-Dispatcher

    Due to inclement weather, the previously scheduled Pruning and Rose Care Workshop of the Mother Lode Rose Society was rescheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 13 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the rose garden of Cliff and Dorothy Wall in Pine Grove. Demonstrations ...

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    January Ask the Master Gardeners - Wilson County News

    Q: As I look ahead to my spring garden, all I can think of are rosebushes. What roses have you had experience growing? A: I like old-fashioned roses because they practically take care of themselves. My very favorite rose is Carefree Beauty (which I ...

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    Tim's Tips: Getting down to basics starts in the soil - Newburyport Daily News

    The winter months are not a time to be doing a lot of gardening. But you can be thinking about gardening and how you can make yourself a better gardener. Last week, I told you about the proper spacing of plants. Proper spacing in your vegetable ...

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