Pruning roses can be a chore, but your efforts will be rewarded by a healthier, well-shaped plant that blooms abundantly and lives longer. Pruning out dead or diseased canes helps increase airflow and sun penetration around living canes, which wards off disease and encourages more flowering . Taking to his TikTok page @themeditteraneangardener , Michael Griffiths shared a video on how to winter prune roses the correct way.
He said: “If you want more blooms on your roses this year, it’s time to give it a prune now.” To help gardeners do so, he’s shared five steps gardeners “need to do” to carry out the task properly. Generally speaking, this means removing the brown or black stems, which are dead, and leaving the green stems, which are living.
Of those stems, make sure to cut them back to the base to ensure all of the dead parts are fully removed. This essentially means taking off the crossing branches as they can rub together, causing damage and encouraging diseases. Michael advised, “Remove any canes that are thinner than a pencil.
” This is because they will grow thin and gangly and “produce fewer blossoms.” To prune the healthy canes, take the overall height down by one-third, cutting just above an outward-facing bud on a 45-degree angle sloping away from the bud. The expert explained that new stems grow in the direction of the bud, and the goal is to encourage them to grow outwards.
Whilst not another pruning step, it is vital to maintain roses after by feeding and mulching them generously. Michael said: “Roses are big eaters so give them a good fertiliser and mulch in the spring.” Wait another month or when the new growth is about a one-half inch long to make my first application of fertiliser.
.
Entertainment
Roses will give you ‘more blooms this year’ if you follow easy 5-step pruning method now
Pruning roses is not as complicated as it may seem, though it's important to follow the right technique now if you want the rewards come summer.