The versatility of planting roses is amazing, whether in garden beds, mass displayed, or a single specimen used as an accent plant. In turf areas can create a wonderful appeal by planting into decorative, terracotta or glazed pots. Most of the guidelines for planting, care and maintenance remain the same. Roses need to have at least 6 hours of full sun a day to grow well. Increase your success with either adjusting soil with adding well composted manure, preferably add fresh garden soil, free draining is very important. Roses do not grow well in long periods of heavy soaked soils. Support plant growth and performance with applying rose fertilizer every three months to maximise flowering. In pots use a premium potting mix or speciality rose potting mix. An excellent addition to fertilizers is Triple Boost liquid tonic for boosting plants resistance to extremes and increasing blooms, as well longer life for cut flowers. Adding sulphate of potash on planting time is recommended to encourage root growth and builds plants overall health. If already planted out existing roses can be supplemented well with Silica Potash, very quick acting as is applied as a foliar spray. This will increase the general health of the roses root system, that can develop a stronger shrub that can repel pest and disease effectively. Disease and pest attack can be prevented with applying foliar spray dual action fungicide as well as insecticide, every few weeks. Regular deadheading spent flowers will also increase your blooms. With pruning, keep it as simple. In mid-winter July, I cut back shrubs by a half, taking care to formatively prune back into a vase shape shrub. Removing ill formed stems, or crossover branches rubbing against each other. After cutting rose bushes I use a fungicide to prevent dieback or disease getting into stems. Overall roses can offer us all such a great reward they are worth giving a try.
Keep Growing On looking at our succulents their beauty can be seen to have fleshy like swollen or thick tough waxy like leaves, as well their branches and stems. Designed by nature they can offer so many various looks. Including rosettes, spiralling shapes the list can go on. Mother nature at her best in the design and adaptation allows these plants to utilise and retain the most out of light and water requirements sparingly given to them in harsh environments they have come from. Their waxy outer leaf surface can repel rainwater efficiently to funnel down to the plants root zone, without the normal evaporative loss in most garden or plant situations.
Another curiosity of this species is that most perform their photosynthesis ‘plants ability to create its own food’, at night-time. As opposed to the rest of the plant world, would enjoy creating this energy during the daytime. Not the case for our succulents. This adaptation helps to prevent these plants from drying out during the day and especially in very dry hot bright situations, as they begin this process as the elements are not as extreme. The classic end result is that succulents are able to retain water, moisture much longer for their survival success.
Most of us gardeners would agree that these unique, spiralling and other fantastic geometric wonders are best shown off in mass planting either in garden beds or suitable pot culture, this can be unlimited by your own imagination. Creating art pieces with pots can offer another avenue to highlight our treasures. From using logs, rocks, unused bins, galvanised buckets, even old wheelbarrows the sky is limitless to your creations. Try inventing your own smaller garden for a courtyard or balcony where garden space may be limited, the rewards can give a real connection with living nature increases your green life harmony.
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