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Off With Their Heads: Deadheading Perennials
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Stop Deadheading. And We Don't Mean Put Away The Tye Dye Shirt
comments (1) November 19th, 2010 in blogs
Stopping deadheading doesn’t mean it’s time to put away your Grateful Dead records. It means if you live in a climate that gets a real winter, it’s time to stop snipping off the old blooms to encourage new ones.
The last thing we want going into winter is tender young growth on the roses. Instead we want them to harden off their canes and go to sleep. You’ve likely noticed during the times you didn’t deadhead because your child’s soccer team made the playoffs the roses grew hips. Hips are the bright “berries” that form where the bloom was.
They are actually seed pods. They are also a rich source of vitamin C and sailors used to carry them on long voyages all those centuries ago to prevent scurvy. As recently as the middle of the last century they were grown in Victory Gardens during World War Two because it was hard to get citrus fruit. They are also a very valuable food source for birds during winter.
More importantly they play a key part in the rose’s normal seasonal growth pattern. A plant’s natural instinct is to reproduce; in the case of roses by seed via rose hips. When you deadhead and cut off the old bloom before the rose sets seed, the rose instinctively produces another bloom to try again. This is why deadheading encourages new blooms.
But with winter coming on it’s time to let the rose fulfill its reproductive job so it can shut down and go to sleep. That is why you need to stop deadheading.
So put away the rose pruners and let roses fulfill their destiny. And feel free to go to You Tube and dial up that “Touch of Gray” video!
Happy Roseing
Paul
posted in: winter, deadheading
Everyone loves roses. If you always wanted to add roses to your garden but were too intimidated by their diva reputation, Roses Are Plants, Too is the blog for you.
Paul Zimmerman has grown thousands of roses for over 15 years and for ten of those years in a sustainable manner. His common-sense approach shows you how to integrate garden roses into your landscape by looking at them as nothing more than flowering shrubs, all the while encouraging you to trust your own "Gardener's Instincts" in the care of these beautiful plants.
You will learn how to prune and train climbing roses, and how to get the most "ka-bloom" out of your shrub, David Austin and Knockout rose bushes. You'll get tips on growing roses organically and trimming them all season to keep their shape. You'll discover the difference between own-root and grafted roses, and more. Much of the instruction will be via videos that Paul produces himself!
Paul Zimmerman ran a rose care company in Los Angeles before moving to South Carolina to start Ashdown Roses. Now he focuses on rose education and teaching via Paul Zimmerman Roses. He lectures, gives workshops, and judges rose trials around the world, and it is this experience he brings to this blog.
Whether you are new to roses or an experienced grower, Paul will open your garden to the vast diversity our national flower offers.
If you have questions about roses and rose care or would like to share your own experiences please visit our Roses Are Plants, Too discussion forum.
To inquire about Paul's workshops and lectures, email him at paul@paulzimmermanroses.com.
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