Thus, you will get an exuberant flowering of roses, all summer long.
Every year I let myself be stunned by their fragrance, their splendor of colors, their abundant flowering...
They're beautiful, the roses in my garden.
If you really want to enjoy a rich bloom all summer long, you have to put a little bit of work into it.
1) Cut out faded roses.
I do this two times a week.
Then I overflow all the rose bushes, including the climbing roses, and cut out all the faded flowers between the flowers that are still in bud or in the open bloom.
This way, all the energy goes to the remaining flowers and your rose garden looks a lot cleaner.
2) Pruning the faded branch.
Has the whole branch blossomed?
Then you look for a five-piece leaf on the flower stalk. About an inch above you prune the branch.
The shoot that arises above a five-piece leaf is much stronger than that above a three- or seven-leaf and thus gives a more beautiful, new flowering.
If you leave faded roses, the plant will throw them off by itself, forming rose hips. All energy goes to the formation of rose hips, as a result of which the plant no longer creates new flowering.
3) New fresh shoots
Pretty soon you will see new, fresh shoots appear. They have a different color and soon develop new flower buds.
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