Mrs. Hart was my next door neighbor on Long Island. She was what we called "an original owner," having moved into her brand new house in a brand new subdivision in the post-war exuberance of the 1940s. In the ensuing decades, she'd raised a son, outlived a husband, and cultivated magnificent rose bushes—big round powder puffs of flowers that dotted her front yard in June. She spent most of her time out there clipping them, wearing a housedress and a floppy hat to prevent sunstroke.
One time I asked her how she kept her roses from going leggy and wild. Mrs. Hart looked up, stopped clipping briefly, and said, "It's easier to show you than to tell you."
Photographs by John Merkl.
Need to Know: A rose bush—as opposed to a climbing rose, or a tea rose—is a floribunda. A floribunda, which can be trained as a hedge as well as a bush, is a cross between a hybrid tea and the smaller, more compact polyantha roses often referred to as landscape roses.
A key distinguishing feature: a floribunda's flowers grow in clusters rather than as single blossoms at the end of a long stem.
Step 1: Gather your supplies:
- Pruners
- Gloves
- Alcohol
- Cotton swabs
Step 2: Clean the blade of your pruners with alcohol on a swab to disinfect them and prevent the spread of disease from one plant to another (roses are especially prone to black spot).
Step 3: Deadheading. As flowers fade, remove them from the bush to encourage new blooms. Grasp the spent flower's individual stem and clip it at its base, separating it from the plant.
Step 4: Shaping the bush. Remove deadwood or errant or leggy stems to encourage new, fuller growth. When removing a stem, always make the cut at a juncture where the stem meets a grouping of five leaves.
The Basics: Make a clean cut at a 45-degree angle; this will enable rain water to run off rather than collecting in the open wound.
Wondering which roses will thrive in your climate? See our regional rose guides at A Rose for All Regions: Northeast US Edition, A Rose for All Regions: Texas Edition, and A Rose for All Regions: Northern California Edition.
New to gardening? See our Gardening 101 archives, with tips on such basics as forcing bulbs, sprouting seeds, and drawing a garden plan.