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#1
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Optimal planting weather?
Hello folks--
I just got my roses from Wayside Gardens yesterday, and I definitely want to plant them this week. However, the weather today is cooler (mid 50's) and windy (15-20 mph), with nighttime temperatures around 50 F. Wednesday and Thursday will be warmer (mid 70's), but still windy. Nighttime temperatures in the mid 50's. Is this OK weather to plant? Since I have 15 roses in all, it will take me 3 or 4 days to plant them all. How should I store the roses I'll be planting later this week? For now I still have them in the box they came in, wrapped in the packing material. The roses I'll plant tomorrow are already soaking in water. Thanks in advance, Jean Barto Newport News, VA Zone 7B -- "If you are going through hell, keep going." Winston Churchill |
#2
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Optimal planting weather?
Jean S. Barto wrote:
Hello folks-- I just got my roses from Wayside Gardens yesterday, and I definitely want to plant them this week. However, the weather today is cooler (mid 50's) and windy (15-20 mph), with nighttime temperatures around 50 F. Perfect bare root planting weather! You want cool and moist. After soaking and planting, mound them with pine straw to keep the canes from drying out. Wednesday and Thursday will be warmer (mid 70's), but still windy. Nighttime temperatures in the mid 50's. Is this OK weather to plant? It is, but I think cooler is better, especially when there is wind. Wind plus warm equals drying. However--if you stay on them, misting/watering every day, they will always be fine. Since I have 15 roses in all, it will take me 3 or 4 days to plant them all. How should I store the roses I'll be planting later this week? They should already be soaking. It is best to get them out of their packing material and into a deep cold water bath right away. My bare roots had to soak for a month before I planted them--and they are just fine. The ones closest to the surface had just begun to sprout when I planted them, the ones under water were still dormant and are not sprouting where I planted them. Thanks in advance, Jean Barto Newport News, VA Zone 7B I love Newport News, by the way. I grew up visiting that part of Virginia quite often. The bus station was in Warsaw at that time. There were still slot machines at the Greyhound rest stops, too! -- "If you are going through hell, keep going." Winston Churchill |
#3
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Optimal planting weather?
Jean S. Barto wrote:
Hello folks-- Hi, Jean. I just got my roses from Wayside Gardens yesterday, and I definitely want to plant them this week. However, the weather today is cooler (mid 50's) and windy (15-20 mph), with nighttime temperatures around 50 F. Wednesday and Thursday will be warmer (mid 70's), but still windy. Nighttime temperatures in the mid 50's. Is this OK weather to plant? I would say that this sounds like optimal weather. How windy is it? If it is so windy that it could rob the planted rose of moisture, and there is no rain to speak of, please make sure that you water well after planting and as days go by to make sure that the newly plated rose does not simply dehydrate. Since I have 15 roses in all, it will take me 3 or 4 days to plant them all. How should I store the roses I'll be planting later this week? For now I still have them in the box they came in, wrapped in the packing material. Please take them out, get rid of all the sawdust and other stuff, and store with the roots soaking in good, clean water (NO ADDITIVES) in a good-sized container that can accommodate the root balls comfortably in a bright area but not in direct sunlight. I have upon occasion had had to let the bare-root roses sit in water like this for almost two to three weeks while I managed to get them in the ground one by one. I have used thirtythree-gallon garbage containers with wheels as the water-tubs for soaking roses this way. No harm comes to roses that are handled like this; but be aware of the possibility of mosquito larvae being hatched in the water in the tub, and if necessary, replace the water every couple of days. Out here, one has had ot think about this problem this year, and am sure West Nile Fever possibilities would be a concern in Virginia as well this year. The roses I'll plant tomorrow are already soaking in water. Excellent, Jean. In my experience, anywhere from 24 to 48 hours of soaking is the best preparation for planting a bare-root rose. -- Radika California USDA 9 / Sunset 15 |
#4
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Optimal planting weather?
Thanks for the tips, I'll get the rest of my roses soaking this afternoon and get started planting tomorrow--the weather will still be good till this weekend, when there's some rain in the forecast--good for the roses, but not so good for the gardener! Jean in VA On 4/1/03 1:00 PM, in article , "Radika Kesavan" wrote: Jean S. Barto wrote: Hello folks-- Hi, Jean. I just got my roses from Wayside Gardens yesterday, and I definitely want to plant them this week. However, the weather today is cooler (mid 50's) and windy (15-20 mph), with nighttime temperatures around 50 F. Wednesday and Thursday will be warmer (mid 70's), but still windy. Nighttime temperatures in the mid 50's. Is this OK weather to plant? I would say that this sounds like optimal weather. How windy is it? If it is so windy that it could rob the planted rose of moisture, and there is no rain to speak of, please make sure that you water well after planting and as days go by to make sure that the newly plated rose does not simply dehydrate. Since I have 15 roses in all, it will take me 3 or 4 days to plant them all. How should I store the roses I'll be planting later this week? For now I still have them in the box they came in, wrapped in the packing material. Please take them out, get rid of all the sawdust and other stuff, and store with the roots soaking in good, clean water (NO ADDITIVES) in a good-sized container that can accommodate the root balls comfortably in a bright area but not in direct sunlight. I have upon occasion had had to let the bare-root roses sit in water like this for almost two to three weeks while I managed to get them in the ground one by one. I have used thirtythree-gallon garbage containers with wheels as the water-tubs for soaking roses this way. No harm comes to roses that are handled like this; but be aware of the possibility of mosquito larvae being hatched in the water in the tub, and if necessary, replace the water every couple of days. Out here, one has had ot think about this problem this year, and am sure West Nile Fever possibilities would be a concern in Virginia as well this year. The roses I'll plant tomorrow are already soaking in water. Excellent, Jean. In my experience, anywhere from 24 to 48 hours of soaking is the best preparation for planting a bare-root rose. |
#5
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Optimal planting weather?
Jean S. Barto wrote:
Thanks for the tips, I'll get the rest of my roses soaking this afternoon and get started planting tomorrow--the weather will still be good till this weekend, when there's some rain in the forecast--good for the roses, but not so good for the gardener! Good luck; just came in from the windy, rainy morning after repotting lots of different things, and I can sympathise. -- Radika California USDA 9 / Sunset 15 |
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