2 New Dawn roses are going to be planted on both sides of my new arch. I am showing how to avoid mistakes while planting big climbing roses to grow on the arch.
Thank you for repeating yourself. I am a newer viewer and your thorough delivery ( and repitition) is much appreciated! ( Sort of reminds me a little bit of soap operas. You can miss the soap operas for a year but because they narrate everything and repeat themselves, you get caught up VERY quickly 😊)
To fix your "mistake" you can plant an additional rose to the arch, it will give additional flowers and hide the bare stems. Shrub roses are great for that, often they are small climbers if trained on a structure. You can do this with a clematis as well. Or if you like it better some herbaceous perennials, will cover the stems up as well.
I have now gotten my husband to watch gardening videos and he and I agree that your channel is our absolute favorite! Have a blessed and wonderful day Olga😊. Btw, my princess charlene de Monaco are now starting to bud out and the D.A s in my arden are all blooming as well. So very charmed by your sweet garden❤️
Such a lovely time we have in our gardens. I loved watching your video, as im soon getting in the mail my Kordes Moderate perfume climbing rose called "Ultraviolet"! I love how you have utilised long cut of tree branches building into each side of the rose Arbour. I too make use of my branches cut for keeping my trees straight and my few rose standards straight. I love putting aside such pieces for future uses, and you've definitely done that here. ❤
You are so welcome! Do you have any suggestions for future videos, which might be helpful for beginner gardener? I will be happy to include them into my future filming ideas. Please let me know. Thank you!
Hello Olga, just stopping by to say hi and what a beautiful garden you’ve created!🌸 Thanks for all the tips. Also lovely to see our Lady there as a guidance and a friend, definitely best companion. 💓✝️
Thank you for sharing your experiences with roses. I love your garden structure. I had experience with roses years ago but we moved so, now I'm trying to plan a new rose garden. I ordered two distant drums roses and now I have to dig some holes before they get here! Thanks again for your lovely video. I really enjoyed it.
You have encouraged me to buy two David Austin rose climbers. They arrived last week. I have a New Dawn climbing rose and she is magnificent. A little susceptible to black spot here in zone 6a but I keep a close eye on her! Good luck to your new little baby.
Thank you for this video. I planted a New Dawn last autumn and it’s growing very well now. My plan is to spiral the canes around a post and up across the top of a narrow arbour. My New Dawn is branching from branches without any pruning so very it’s very prolific. I’m not very experienced with roses and my other climbing rose is not prolific at all like New Dawn. The other climber is a David Austin, Tess of the D’Urbervilles which has been retired, and it has a very simple usual growth pattern of a few main canes with laterals and no branching of second main cane from main cane, so I’m wondering how to train New Dawn with not just the initial main canes but the branching second canes as they also have new shoot buds along them. New Dawn appears to have a very busy growth pattern to what I’m used to and I’m wondering as there are so many main canes with side canes, maybe should I cut some short as I won’t have anywhere to train them all? Also, I googled to find information on New Dawn and some sellers say it’s a climber and other sellers say it’s a rambler. I’ve read it’s a wichuraiana hybrid which is a rambler so do you know what New Dawn is classed as? Any advice on training New Dawn’s prolific growth would be gratefully received.
Twenty years ago l fell in love with the "New Dawn" rose. These were pink, l'm not sure but l think they may come in different colors. If ever l have the chance to grow a beautiful garden, "New Dawn" would be in it for sure.
Would it be possible to cut a rose all the way back and replant it in a better spot? Thank you for this information! I just found your channel and am a new subscriber!! Can’t wait to watch your other videos. I am in Colorado, zone 5b
Hi there, welcome to my channel! It is good to have you here! I wouldn't cut my rose all the way to the ground. How about cutting it to 3-5 inches high and then transplant... If you have grafted rose, it might not recover from drastic cut.
Woohoo new baby roses💕💕 how exciting 👏🏻👏🏻 Also can you give me advise on how to fix my roses situation right now. So i had 3 David Austin roses on the ground (flower bed)since last August. They didn’t seem to grow much and very lack of leaves, im a bit guilty of not watering them often enough, but i do give them fish fertilizer and plant food ( plant tone). Anyway last week I decided to scrape the layer of mulch cover around them to see what’s going on and I discovered look like 3 of them have their root crawling up on the ground 😮😅🧐. What i have to do ?Im thinking to digging them up and nurse them in the big pots instead.
Hm, yes, drought will make roses to go into semi dormancy. It looks like you roses were not planted too deep and mulch didn’t keep them from being pushed by the frost. You can move them to the pot. What I would do, I would put a layer of fresh good soil over the roots and then apply mulch. Don’t be skimpy with that soil level, 3 inches will do your roses good.
Hi Olga, my name is James and i live in Westchester county NY. I am assuming we live in the same growing zone. I really enjoy your videos and they have inspired me to be very creative with my various climbing roses. I wanted to ask you, do notice a stark difference in the growth rate between own root roses vs those that are grafted? I have 3 New Dawn roses that seem to push out a lot more growth vs own root iceberg climber, own root westerland. Can I expect to see vigorous growth from these other roses in the next growing season 2023. Please note i planted these new climbers this spring 2022. There is such a marked difference in the growth rate between New Dawn n 3 other newly planted climbers, Westerland, iceberg, and even white dawn. Thanks for any help/ advice. Much appreciated.. James from New York.
Hi James, sorry for a late response. There is a huge difference between own root and grafted roses. Grafted ones have a strong start since they come into our gardens being older than own roots. My own roots are super babies this year for me, which is fine, I need to be patient. No blooms and strong growth, let them focus on root system first. In several years own roots should catch up with grafted and maybe outlive us all together. Grafted roses last, what, 15 years, own roots can live 50 or more.
Crown princess margareta and james galway climbing rose. Grow against a four and a half chain link fence or I have a treated lumber wall with double lattice with half inch openings ten feet high. Which do I grow at and plant 2 feet out and in the middle? Thank you! :)
Hi Gloria, Those climbers are both excellent and up to 12 feet high. You can grow any of them. As for support. I would go with ten feet high fence since those climbers are very vigorous and they can be too big for chain fence. Happy gardening!