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Bareroot
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01/09/2025
Rose bushes are British gardeners’ favourite plant. In this complete guide to planting rose bushes, find out the best conditions for roses, how to plant them in borders or in pots, and avoid rose replant sickness.
Roses are cheap and easy to buy bareroot in Winter season, looking like this:
So these are the roses that you’ll get from us at Ashridge. So, these are bareroot roses. Basically they’ve just been dug up out of the ground from the fields, the rose fields, at the back end of the year. We leave them in the cold store, and then we send them out. If you want to trim the roots, just grab the roots, just take a little bit off just to tidy it up, mainly just to get it into the pot as well, really, or into the ground. But it’s the fibrous roots that you need to keep an eye on, and don’t let these dry out. The top part, just have a look for any dead pieces on them on the top growth, or any snapped pieces, or any thin pieces really. And you can kind of take them out, just prune them out. Prune these thin pieces out. And then you’ll get little snags like that, just pull them off. And then once they’re planted, then you can give it a good prune. Once the bud starts to break here, in the ground, prune them down to the buds. And always choose an outward facing bud. And you can thin some of this out as well. So this middle piece, about there, let’s take it out. So it gets a bit of a more of an open bush in the middle, and then all the flowers will be on the outside and grow straight up.
TRANSCRIPT
Roses are long-suffering plants and will grow in most gardens.
Whichever type of rose you’re planting, first consider Soil, Wind, and Sun.
It is well worth covering the bed in a layer 3-4″ deep of well rotted compost or horse manure, and digging it over thoroughly to the depth of a spade.
Your roses will be growing there and flowering hard for the next 30+ years, so this preparation will pay huge dividends.
Bareroot roses, like all bareroot plants, are delivered from November to the end of March.
This advice applies to any bush rose, whether it’s a Shrub, Hybrid Tea, Floribunda, Patio, or a Rambler when planted out in the open.
Its bud union is at the top of the stem, so naturally it can’t go at or below ground level, as with other roses.
VIDEO TRANSCRIPT
You will need your bareroot climbing rose, a spade, some rootgrow and a watering can filled with water.
VIDEO TRANSCRIPT
The short answer is that it really doesn’t make a huge difference in most cases: you can plant so that the graft union is above soil level, at soil level, or a couple of inches below soil level.
We recommend planting the graft union just an inch above soil level, which should give the best of both worlds.
The advantage of burying the graft union is that the rose will be very stable in the ground and won’t suffer from “wind rock”, which tends to affect taller shrub roses.
The advantage of keeping the graft union slightly above ground is that it will always be completely clear which shoot are root suckers that need to be removed.
Moving and replanting roses is perfectly possible, and the younger the rose, the better it will transplant.
The big exception is if a rose is suffering from replant sickness, in which case it’s probably better to burn it and buy a new one.
It’s best to prepare the soil you’re moving the rose to in advance, as described above.
At the new site, Apply some Rootgrow or other microrrhizal fungi, and plant the rose into the soil – taking care not to plant it deeper than it had been before. Water, prune and mulch as necessary.
If you absolutely have to move a rose in Summer, the chance of failure is higher.
Instead of making the rose you want to move bareroot as you would when it’s dormant in Winter (see above), the aim is to lift it with a decent rootball
Preparation: A week or two before moving it, hard prune the rose, giving the cuts time to seal up, and feed it with Rootgrow Afterplant
Not really: rose replant disease stunts the growth of roses planted into soil where one was growing before, but there are things you can do about it.
Bearing in mind all the above, it’s probably clear that roses in pots will need long term attention in order to thrive!
Rose breeders have been working for generations to create miniature and patio rose varieties, and tough, low, sprawling “ground cover” varieties like the Flower Carpet series that are smaller and less demanding, well suited for growing in pots with less work.
A 5 to 7 litre pot will do nicely for potting up a bareroot rose.
VIDEO TRANSCRIPT
To grow rose bushes in pots, especially larger varieties, it pays to “pot them them” several times.
Meaning you repot them yearly in progressively bigger pots, instead of planting straight into the big pot where you eventually plan to grow them.
Potting up has several tasty advantages, it’s the wise way to begin growing roses in pots; if the practice of potting up is new for you, Mr Fraser Valley Rose Farm walks you through it:
Note that when you buy a pot-grown rose from a nursery, that nursery pot is only good for one growing season at most: your rose wants to be in a bigger pot, or planted out in the soil promptly.
If you are keen to grow a climbing rose in a pot, place the early pots on top of something to hold them up at the final pot’s soil level.
Choose one of the less vigorous climbers, less than 4 metres.
Your final pot size should be at least 45cm tall; the larger, the better.