ROSE RAMBLER … 15.01.2015
Hello dear rose friends … here at Clonbinane we’ve had a very ordinary 17mm of rain – so disheartening when news reports suggested no less than 20mm every day for at least 4 days – in my dream, I saw the swale filled with water again, I felt the joy of being on the mower and the smell of freshly cut grass … ??? No wonder we hardly ever watch the TV!
MID SUMMER SPECIAL!
TAKE $5 OFF EVERY ROSE!*
THREE WEEKS ONLY –
OFFER ENDS
MONDAY, 2ND FEBRUARY 2015, 11.59pm AEDST
FOR ONLINE ORDERS –
Use the promotional coupon code ‘MIDSUMMER5’
in your shopping cart
*Conditions apply: Only valid for orders over $50.00.
Offer is not available for the Gift Rose.
GRA’S GARBLE …
Several weeks ago I told you about ‘free fertilizer’ made up by adding weeds along with herbs like comfrey, parsley, etc. in a hessian bag suspended in a drum/garbage bin filled with water. Well, there were potted roses in the nursery which for some reason or another looked like they were starved of nutrient – maybe they missed out on fertilizer or fertilizer fell out if the pot was tipped over in high wind – so I’ve been pouring my ‘brew’ over those yellow-leaved, sickly looking roses and the response has been astounding! The leaves greened-up almost overnight and now they’re flowering again.
Here’s a pic of how I set this up … remember to keep it well away from the house because it’s got a very potent smell about it!
Q. What has a head and a tail but no body? …. You’ve gotta guess this one??? A. A coin
My very own-bred rose, GRA’S BLUE continues to amaze me with its perpetual continuity of free-flowering habit and I’m so glad that it’s thornless because I just grab a handful of spent flower stems and chop it … within days it has fresh foliage and is ready to set flowers all over again. I recently picked a bunch for a vase – aaah, the fragrance and the blooms lasted well despite the heat.
If you would like to create a low-growing hedge of roses, similar to the one we have planted here at the Rose Farm, I highly recommend my little beauty – GRA’S BLUE for a continual show of small lavender-blue, fragrant blooms throughout the season.
Q. What is the best way to communicate with a fish? A. Drop him a line!
I watched Diana throwing letters into the Jamieson River after I told her this joke … she didn’t catch a single fish! We had fun though!!!
SUMMER ROSE CARE …
DO’S
- Remove spent flowers regularly – leave good foliage cover on the bush to prevent sunburning the stems
- Fertilize with quality organic fertilizer – liquid or solid – just feed the roses every 8 weeks over the entire soil surface around the bushes!
- Top-up mulch – quality lucerne/pea straw highly recommended but any mulch is better than none at all – we don’t recommend mushroom compost
- Deep soak weekly with no less than 20 litres per watering
DON’T’S
- Never water late in the day – walk through the rose garden with a morning coffee in one hand, a hose in the other – enjoy the evenings with only a glass in your hand!
- Never spray the organic rose management program on a day when the temperature is expected to exceed 30 degrees
- Never remove all the foliage when dead-heading/summer pruning – here’s a recent email enquiry:
“A lady up here (central N.S.W.) has a very old overgrown rose. It has some lovely water shoots on it, is it too late to cut the old wood back???”
ANSWER: It’s never too late to remove old wood from a rose which is rejuvenating by producing healthy water shoots … however, because of the potential of hot sun burning newly cut stems, be sure to cover them – some shade mesh would do the trick – you don’t want to cause sunburn on newly cut branches! If the new water shoots have good foliage cover on them, that foliage would be adequate to stop any sun burn. Go for it … cheers
If you grow RUGOSA ROSES, now is the time to harvest their summer crop of hips to make ROSE HIP JAM … in exchange for a jar of jam, I would be happy to pick our rose hips and forward them to the adventurous jam-maker. Please contact me on 03-5787 1123 if you’re interested in this barter!
In closing … we’ll obviously see you at the Rose Farm soon to take advantage of this great Mid-Summer offer! The roses look sensationally healthy and blooming profusely; they are more than ready and waiting to be planted in your garden … ooh, the joy of an instant rose garden during this wonderful summer.
~ Cheers from Graham, Diana & Mooi at CLONBINANE