Garden Help
Apr. 17th, 2021 08:18 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
So, my dad recently helped me dig a new patch in my garden, and I planted a rose bush in there. It was a Valentine's gift from my mom and spent a couple months in the house. Part of it is green and healthy, but a lot of the stems are brown and dead looking. I don't know what to do to save it. Do I leave the dead parts there? Or do I trim them down the ground in hopes of making the healthy parts stronger? I don't do much gardening, and I'm sure sure how to keep roses healthy, so any advice is greatly appreciated.
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Date: 2021-04-18 01:05 am (UTC)If you're still getting freezing nights or snow where you are, cover your rose with something to protect it in bad weather, because new transplants are delicate. An old blanket works well.
Good luck and enjoy your rose!
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Date: 2021-04-18 01:10 am (UTC)Umm... That's kind of hard to say. We seem to be over the freezing nights and snow here this year, but my grandma usually says not to plant anything until mid-May. A quick google search reveals that the last frost around here is typically between April 12-20, so I think I'll be alright. I will be keeping an eye on the weather though. It has a habit of being kind of wonky.
Thanks! I appreciate the advice, and I'm hoping to have a very green and healthy garden this year. :)
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Date: 2021-04-18 04:10 am (UTC)Good luck!
Ford
PS: I swear our granny could plant a rock and make it grow! We wish we had that kind of a green thumb!
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Date: 2021-04-18 04:22 am (UTC)Nice to meet you Ford!
Oh yeah, grannies are awesome. Three of my four grandparents had (and one still has) quite a way with plants. I'm nowhere near that good, but I am trying.
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Date: 2021-04-18 04:34 am (UTC)I generally pile autumn leaves as high as I can on my roses and then rake them away in the Spring. The leaves are a nice, cheap mulch.
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Date: 2021-04-18 05:19 am (UTC)Oh, that's a good idea. I don't have a whole lot of leaves in my yard, but I do have three lilac trees, one of which is massive, so I still get a decent amount.
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Date: 2021-04-18 07:29 am (UTC)I figure the leaves are free and not attractive to people who might want to steal or break things. I go and gather them from the piles our city encourages people to rake into the street so they can gather and remove them easily. In the spring, they get dug into the ground in garden spots or turned into the compost pile.
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Date: 2021-04-18 09:59 pm (UTC)Oh nice. Our leaves have to go in yard waste bags for collection. Free compost is a good thing to have :) I also didn't know about burying leaves in the garden, I pulled all of mine out when I did the first weed of the season.
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Date: 2021-04-19 01:09 am (UTC)I do those things purposefully but haphazardly. It is possible to research what nutrients each of those things provide, test the soil, and amend with a more scientific outlook.
Oh, and if you're in the city or near a big road, bone meal is an amendment that can bind to lead and make it less available to the plants growing in a plot, so long as the lead isn't too high. Well, it will bind if the lead content is too high, but not enough. I lucked into a lead testing and amending study associated with a nearby college, and was happily told that the lead content of my garden area isn't too high for food gardening. The alternate plan would have been to seal off the existing dirt and build raised beds over it and buy soil. I was glad not to have to do that!
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Date: 2021-08-27 07:54 pm (UTC)This is excellent information to have, thank you!
>>Oh, and if you're in the city or near a big road, bone meal is an amendment that can bind to lead and make it less available to the plants growing in a plot, so long as the lead isn't too high.<<
This is also extremely fascinating, though I don't believe I have a lead problem in my area. (Although I'm not certain. There might be one.)
>>Oh, and if you're in the city or near a big road, bone meal is an amendment that can bind to lead and make it less available to the plants growing in a plot, so long as the lead isn't too high.<<
Yay for being able to plant food directly into the ground!
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Date: 2021-04-19 01:19 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2021-08-27 07:39 pm (UTC)(Sorry for the terribly delayed response, my spoons evaporated on me for a little while.)
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Date: 2021-08-28 05:12 am (UTC)The city encourages people here to sweep leaves into the street for collection, but they have no problem with me mulching roses with huge piles of leaves, and I often gather from the street piles in the autumn.
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Date: 2021-08-28 05:25 am (UTC)We have to put ours into yard waste bags here (big brown paper bags essentially) so using the neighbours leaves isn't quite as feasible. Although I don't think anyone would have a problem with me raking their yard and taking the leaves for myself, if I asked.
If I do use leaves as mulch, do I leave them above ground over winter and bury them in spring, or do I bury them right away?
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Date: 2021-08-28 05:36 am (UTC)If you have to spend money on those bags, you might find that some neighbors would be happy to have some of the bags emptied and returned for re-filling? Depends on the neighbors, of course. And most people are happy to have somebody else rake their lawns.
You don't want to be digging things into the ground too close to a rose plant, especially in the fall--you don't want to damage their root systems. But they're very happy to have already-composted leaves tossed on top of their roots.
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Date: 2022-01-24 02:03 am (UTC)