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No sign of Life

 
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flimbin
Guest





PostPosted: Fri Aug 11, 2006 6:15 pm    Post subject: No sign of Life Reply with quote

I bought ten bare-rooted roses and planted them in March. They were all
planted together, the day after they arrived, in the same area of the
garden. 4 of the 10 have grown and flowered but the other 6 still show
no sign of life. How long should I wait before assuming they are dead?




--
flimbin
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Gail Futoran
Guest





PostPosted: Fri Aug 11, 2006 8:49 pm    Post subject: Re: No sign of Life Reply with quote

"flimbin" <flimbin.2cdpjy@gardenbanter.co.uk> wrote in message
news:flimbin.2cdpjy@gardenbanter.co.uk...
Quote:

I bought ten bare-rooted roses and planted them in March. They were all
planted together, the day after they arrived, in the same area of the
garden. 4 of the 10 have grown and flowered but the other 6 still show
no sign of life. How long should I wait before assuming they are dead?

--
flimbin

I would be tempted to assume the non-active
roses are dead after that long a time in the ground.
It should be easy to check: Are the canes dry
and brittle?

If that's the case, a 60% failure rate is bad
news. Either you were sold poor stock, or there
is some cultural problem (soil, water, pests,
competing plants nearby), or a combination of
those factors.

Planting bareroots can be tricky, too. If
you haven't done it before, it's possible you
didn't give the roses a good start. Some
roses will survive/thrive despite our best
efforts to kill them. Others will not.

Gail
near San Antonio TX Zone 8 USA
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jtill
Guest





PostPosted: Sat Aug 12, 2006 3:08 am    Post subject: Re: No sign of Life Reply with quote

I would politely inquire how the supplier handles his roses and explain
to him how you handled them. Determine if you can just how long they
were out of the ground and discuss that with him. Like Gail said,
something went wrong. Your fault, you lose. Post Office's fault, you
probably lose. Suppliers fault, maybe he will replace them. Rose roots
die if they dry out, if the supplier did not package them to keep the
roots damp, dead roses. If you unpacked them and was slow about
planting them, hours?, dead roots. The roots simply MUST be kept damp
from dig up to planting. Many folk unpack new roses and quickly
submerge them in water for 12 hours prior to planting, to rehydrate
them, and repeatdly soak their bed the first week or so after planting.

Joe T
Baytown, Tx.

flimbin wrote:
Quote:
I bought ten bare-rooted roses and planted them in March. They were all
planted together, the day after they arrived, in the same area of the
garden. 4 of the 10 have grown and flowered but the other 6 still show
no sign of life. How long should I wait before assuming they are dead?




--
flimbin
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Snooze
Guest





PostPosted: Sat Aug 12, 2006 6:22 am    Post subject: Re: No sign of Life Reply with quote

"flimbin" <flimbin.2cdpjy@gardenbanter.co.uk> wrote in message
news:flimbin.2cdpjy@gardenbanter.co.uk...
Quote:

I bought ten bare-rooted roses and planted them in March. They were all
planted together, the day after they arrived, in the same area of the
garden. 4 of the 10 have grown and flowered but the other 6 still show
no sign of life. How long should I wait before assuming they are dead?

It's nearly the end of summer, the ones that haven't shown any life are well
dead. By now all your bare roots should have had produced significant
healthy new growth.

Many stores on this side of the big pond have lifetime return policies on
plants. Perhaps you can return them and try again next spring. I'm not
really familiar with England's weather, but if last year's London weather in
December/January was normal, then my guess is March is on the tail end of
the bareroot planting season.

-S
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flimbin
Guest





PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 2:24 am    Post subject: Re: No sign of Life Reply with quote

Gail Futoran Wrote:
Quote:
"flimbin" flimbin.2cdpjy@gardenbanter.co.uk wrote in message
news:flimbin.2cdpjy@gardenbanter.co.uk...-

I bought ten bare-rooted roses and planted them in March. They were
all
planted together, the day after they arrived, in the same area of the
garden. 4 of the 10 have grown and flowered but the other 6 still
show
no sign of life. How long should I wait before assuming they are
dead?-
-
--
flimbin-

I would be tempted to assume the non-active
roses are dead after that long a time in the ground.
It should be easy to check: Are the canes dry
and brittle?

If that's the case, a 60% failure rate is bad
news. Either you were sold poor stock, or there
is some cultural problem (soil, water, pests,
competing plants nearby), or a combination of
those factors.

Planting bareroots can be tricky, too. If
you haven't done it before, it's possible you
didn't give the roses a good start. Some
roses will survive/thrive despite our best
efforts to kill them. Others will not.

Gail
near San Antonio TX Zone 8 USA

Thanks.

The canes are brown, but I wouldnt say brittle. I have decided to
replace them but pot them up and see if anything happens in spring. One
of the canes on one of the roses is green at the base but there is no
leaf or stem growth.




--
flimbin
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Gail Futoran
Guest





PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 11:45 pm    Post subject: Re: No sign of Life Reply with quote

"flimbin" <flimbin.2cghjy@gardenbanter.co.uk> wrote in message
news:flimbin.2cghjy@gardenbanter.co.uk...
Quote:

Gail Futoran Wrote:
"flimbin" flimbin.2cdpjy@gardenbanter.co.uk wrote in message
news:flimbin.2cdpjy@gardenbanter.co.uk...-

I bought ten bare-rooted roses and planted them in March. They were
all
planted together, the day after they arrived, in the same area of the
garden. 4 of the 10 have grown and flowered but the other 6 still
show
no sign of life. How long should I wait before assuming they are
dead?-
-
--
flimbin-

I would be tempted to assume the non-active
roses are dead after that long a time in the ground.
It should be easy to check: Are the canes dry
and brittle?

If that's the case, a 60% failure rate is bad
news. Either you were sold poor stock, or there
is some cultural problem (soil, water, pests,
competing plants nearby), or a combination of
those factors.

Planting bareroots can be tricky, too. If
you haven't done it before, it's possible you
didn't give the roses a good start. Some
roses will survive/thrive despite our best
efforts to kill them. Others will not.

Gail
near San Antonio TX Zone 8 USA

Thanks.

The canes are brown, but I wouldnt say brittle. I have decided to
replace them but pot them up and see if anything happens in spring. One
of the canes on one of the roses is green at the base but there is no
leaf or stem growth.
--
flimbin

I've also potted up roses that weren't doing
that well and sometimes it works. But I
have to agree with other posters that if you
haven't seen any growth by now, the roses
are dead.

Gail
near San Antonio TX USA Zone 8
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jahsiah
Guest





PostPosted: Sun Aug 27, 2006 3:26 am    Post subject: Re: No sign of Life Reply with quote

Roses are beautiful aren't they? With lovely colours and petals and a
fragrance to match
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