School Festival Start!! Let It Flow! School Festival! Festival All Day Long!! Been a While!! Can't Be a Child Anymore. The Lovely Lady Nagant. Great Explosion Murder God Dynamight. A Young Woman's Declaration. The Bonds of One For All. That's the Idea, Ochaco. Roaring Sports Festival. In Their Own Quirky Ways.
Strategy, Strategy, Strategy. The Boy Born with Everything. Battle on, Challengers! Hero Killer: Stain vs U. The Aftermath of Hero Killer: Stain. Gear up for Final Exams. The Scoop on U. Class 1-A. Relief for License Trainees. Japanese Hero Billboard Chart. Bare root roses are obviously live plants so do need fairly immediate treatment upon arrival.
This can be difficult in times of heavy frost or snow. It is prudent in these conditions to prepare an area in which to heel in the roses. More advice on heeling in can be found within our planting advice pages and a full set of planting instructions will come with your rose.
We would never advise buying a pre-packed rose from a supermarket for you have no idea how long they have been packaged and may well have dried out. Bare root roses are available to order throughout the year and are normally delivered between November 1st and March 31st.
These should always be hard pruned at the time of planting, before they are placed in the hole is the logical time. Even the most rampant of ramblers will benefit from this treatment as it encourages basal growth, from which the plant will make its shape.
Climbers, ramblers and shrub roses should be reduced to about six inches, bush roses to about four inches. A correctly planted rose will need to have the union and first inch or so of branches below soil level. This is to reduce the risk of suckers developing and damage by wind-rock. For a bare root rose the hole should be wide enough to allow the roots to be spread out and deep enough so that the base of the stems are just covered.
We recommend using a good quality compost, like John Innes No 3, especially if planting roses into pots. We would also advise adding a proprietary rose food or bone meal into the base of the hole. A handful is enough and this should be mixed in with the soil there to avoid root scorch. A little powdered food can also be sprinkled onto the removed soil before it is returned.
Alternatively, we would recommend using Peter Beales Roots Boost mychorrhizal fungi. Unlike bone meal, mychorrhizal fungi should be applied directly to the roots to promote better absorption of water and essential nutrients. The bare root rose should now be held with one hand at the right depth with the roots spread out, whilst the first of the soil is returned, either by hand or with a spade. When approximately half the hole is full the rose can be left alone and the soil firmed in by foot.
The remainder of the soil can then be returned and firmed in the same way. Once this is done the surface soil may be tidied and the rose labelled, there is nothing more annoying than not knowing the name of a beautiful rose. Much of the bare root planting instructions also apply for a rose bought in a container, with the first inch or so of the branches below soil level, and the hole wide enough for the root ball. To reduce the risk of damaging the root system we would not advocate the teasing out of the roots.
The plant should be young enough to allow the roots to break through by themselves. If purchased early in the year it is wise to leave the rose in its pot until late May at the earliest to give the roots time to establish.
A more comprehensive set of planting instructions can be found within the advice section of the website. For information on delivery costs please click here.
Please Note: Bare root roses are tied in bundles. If you have ordered more than one rose please cut the string holding the roses together and separate carefully before planting. Bare root roses should not be planted when their roots are dry nor should they be planted during frost. If it is frosty when you receive them, they should not come to any harm left unopened in their package for up to one week. If it remains frosty for longer than this open the package and, after thoroughly moistening the roots, place the roses still in their bundle in a container of damp soil or damp sand.
A wooden box, bucket or large polythene bag will usually hold enough soil for this purpose. Plant out the roses when the frost has disappeared. Container roses are delivered throughout the year.
If you receive your container rose at the start of the year then it is likely to have been recently potted into its container. This is to allow the young fibrous roots time to establish and knit together with the surrounding soil, which will minimise any chance of damage.
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Students join classes from anywhere in the world, and have the option to either enrol part-time, in conjunction with their standard schooling, or in a full-time capacity. If you are in high school and looking to study the UK curriculum, or want to accelerate your studies with some extra classes, CGA is the right place for you.
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