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-   -   Rambler roses - how to prune? (https://www.quiltingboard.com/general-chit-chat-non-quilting-talk-f7/rambler-roses-how-prune-t58803.html)

Favorite Fabrics 08-10-2010 05:11 PM

I have several old-fashioned rambler roses that came with my house... who knows how old they are; I've lived here for 20 years and they were obviously mature even that long ago. They are growing along the back wall of the garage - about four of them - and they pretty much have swallowed the entire wall, all the way up to the roof. You'd never know it, but there are four trellises behind them. The roses, though, have reached out about four feet from the wall. I've procrastinated on pruning them (again) because it's, well, a rather unpleasant and prickly job.

Anybody else out there growing rambler roses? How do YOU deal with their... uh... exuberant growth? Do you prune them every year?

craftybear 08-10-2010 05:13 PM

love to see a photo of them

Favorite Fabrics 08-10-2010 05:20 PM

They're not so beautiful right now...

When they bloom, they form a virtual wall of hot pink, then they fade a bit lighter. But being ramblers, they only bloom but once a year.

Their bloom time overlaps with a brilliant royal blue Japanese iris that I've planted in front of them, and that color is echoed pretty closely by the Jackmani violet-purple clematis that is on a trellis nearby. Then there are perennial sweetpeas that try to climb up on all this... and then the sweet autumn clematis that tries to outdo one of the roses and...

If you're sensing garden chaos here, you're absolutely right.

craftybear 08-10-2010 05:23 PM

that would be a hard job to thin out as you would get stuck all the time

we had an old rose bush that we tore out when we moved to this house was too big and along the fence line

Favorite Fabrics 08-10-2010 05:27 PM

I'm thinking of just taking it ALL out except for the five or so new canes per plant. I'll sacrifice most of the blooms for next year, of course, but at least the daylilies and iris will have a chance to get some light again.

I have some wonderful long leather gloves to wear for this task, so it's not a totally awful job. But it will probably take a couple of days to get it done. Too hot right now to do it all in one stretch!

icon17 08-10-2010 05:32 PM

You know I have a wild type rose and last fall just cut the *&*!!! out of it and boy do'es it look good! I really think you could do the same thing and they will be just great. They are alot harder to kill than most people think.

sewmuchmore 08-10-2010 05:37 PM

You can cut it back to the ground and they grow back. I have a rambler and when DH can move around it he cuts away.

texas granny 08-10-2010 05:42 PM

Some things bloom on New wood. Others bloom on Old Wood. try cutting it back and see what happens

amma 08-10-2010 05:49 PM

We have butchered them, and they come back every year LOL
As long as you leave some stock above the ground, you really cannot hurt them any. :D:D:D

I go To The Sea To Breathe 08-10-2010 06:18 PM

my husband weed wacks and mows them down and they come right back the next year a little bit tamer. Mine are yellow. I call them my thorn bushes that has roses.


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