I love this demonstration! I’m a very visual person. I’m not going to lie, I felt intimidated once I received my bare roots but now with this video I feel like I can conquer this down 😂 thank you!
I’m just now seeing this and I have to say that this is the best tutorial video ever! You explained everything so easily! Thank you! I’ve made alot if mistakes when planting my roses but they’re still alive but I often wonder what I could’ve done differently so it would grow better. Now I know for next time
thanks, your video makes me feel that I can do this right. I've watched others that made this seem so complicated. It's really quite simple. I am in the north so I guess I'll be burying the crown below the surface.
Thrilled you found our video to be more helpful than others!! I think with anything in life - it should be simplified and easy to understand. I know I would like it that way. Happy planting!
i think i killed them, one started to show leaves, but they dried up an fell off, the other plant never did, now i have two sticks protruding out of the ground. I'm trying to figure out what i did wrong.
Hello! New subscriber. Thank you for the excellent and informative video on planting roses! I live in zone 6a and I appreciate that you explained the differences in how deep to plant the rose with also explaining “why.” I’ll be receiving a rose shipment in April/May and now I’m feeling more confident about planting them. I also noticed you didn’t use any fertilizer/rose food when you planted them. That’s not necessary? Thank you!
Thank you for your kind feedback! Fertilizers shouldn’t be used until the plant produces its first sprouts or new growth. The goal is to allow the bare root to establish roots first and then fertilize to promote growth and blooms 💐
Bare root roses are rose plants that have bare root (without soil covering). Bare root roses come in 2 types of root: Ownroot and Grafted. You can plant both types of rootings the same way as demonstrated in my video here 💐 happy planting and thank you for your order!
Ideally, 4 ft apart BUT mine are planted 2.5 feet apart and they’re fine. The idea behind spacing them further apart is to prevent disease build up from lack of air circulation between the plants. But since we’re on open land, we don’t have that problem as much as a gardener in a smaller suburb yard