Print
This List
Email to
a Friend
How to Replant a Rose
HOW TO
Tags: Replant Roses, Roses, Rose Care, Healthy Roses
How many times to you get beautiful roses hate that they have to die? Well, you can plant those beautiful roses in your own yard with good soil, plenty of sunlight and water, and a little patience.
| 1. | When roses are given or bought, find the roses with the toughest stems, and make sure the leaves remain in tact. |
| 2. | Once you have completely separated the arrangement, trim the bottom portion of the rose at an angle (approx. 25 degrees). |
| 3. | With a gardening shovel, dig a hole about as round as a tea cup saucer. |
| 4. | Fill the hole 1/4 full of water. |
| 5. | You can place approx 3 roses about an inch apart from each other in the hole. |
| 6. | You must place the rose as far in the ground to where a leaf 'branch' is barried as well, but the leaf itself must be exposed without soil. |
| 7. | Carefully replace the soil between the spaces of the roses. |
| 8. | Water again until the soil is moist. |
| 9. | Remain watering the roses twice a week before the sun is up or after the sun has gone down. |
| 10. | Note the flower of the rose will die, but the leaf will remain green, and alive. |
| 11. | The branch that hold the rose will turn brown and dry, this is okay. However, if the leaf dies, you may have a dead growth. That is where the other two roses come into play. At least one will survive, if proper care is taken. |
| 12. | The following year, the rose plant will bear more leaves. Roses may not bloom that same year, but the following spring it may. |
| 13. | If you want your rose bush to fill out in the middle, trim back the leaves as they begin to grow, they will come back the next spring fuller. |
Lister:
ListAfterList Wiki Contributors
Source:
WikiHow – All text in this list shared under a Creative Commons License
Other lists of interest:
This list not rated yet – be the first to rate it