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Pruning roses,  watering roses, feeding roses, winterizing roses Watering and Fertilizing Bareroot Roses

Feeding your roses is another matter that is a little easier to explain than watering. Roses need a balanced diet. Roses are NPK kinda things, as are most plants: Nitrogen, Phosphorus and Potash. Most formulations you see for roses and for that matter other flowering or fruiting plants are numbers like 5-10-10, lower in Nitrogen, higher in Phosphorous and Potash.

We recommend, without hesitation, Mills Magic Mills Magic (available from our supplier directly to you). Our customers rave about it, but any good organic fertilizer will do the job.

General rules about feeding (remember, general rules, not the Holy Grail!): Roses should be fed at least three times a year. If you are using liquid fertilizer, you may feed up to six times a year-use organic fertilizers if possible. Some rose lovers feed when they "dead head" the old flowers, others feed quarterly during the season. A few easy things to remember: Water in the morning, fertilize in the morning, spray in the morning, and like most of us, it's a great time to garden!

Check with your local nursery or local chapter of the American Rose Society to identify the chemicals and fertilizers recommended and permitted in your locale.

Now that they are in ground and growing, you need to keep a watchful eye out for pests and disease.



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