Why Those Shoots at Your Rose Base Are Actually Invaders—And How to Stop Them

Why Those Shoots at Your Rose Base Are Actually Invaders—And How to Stop Them

That vigorous shoot at the base of your rosebush isn’t a bonus—it’s a takeover attempt by the rootstock. Most garden roses are grafted plants, and their wild rootstocks constantly send up aggressive shoots that steal nutrients from your prized blooms. Here’s how to identify them and remove them properly.

The Early Spring Pruning Mistake That Destroys Your Roses All Summer Long

The Early Spring Pruning Mistake That Destroys Your Roses All Summer Long

Most gardeners prune their roses too early and too aggressively in spring, mistaking dormant canes for dead wood and depleting the plant’s stored energy before growth even begins. This single timing error cascades into weak growth, fewer blooms, and increased disease vulnerability throughout the entire season. The solution isn’t complicated—it requires watching for one natural signal and waiting three weeks longer than your instincts demand.

Spring Perennial Division: The Timing Mistake That’s Costing You Blooms

Spring Perennial Division: The Timing Mistake That's Costing You Blooms

For years, dividing perennials every spring felt like responsible gardening—until the missing blooms told a different story. The mistake isn’t dividing in spring, it’s the exact moment you choose to dig. Timing within those crucial weeks separates thriving gardens from disappointing ones.