Summer Economizing Tips For Roses

by Bonnie Manion on August 31, 2009

Tournament of Roses, Grandiflora Tree Roses

Tournament of Roses, Grandiflora Tree Roses

How many of you have heard of Heirloom Roses? They are a year-round mail order rose grower, 25 miles outside of Portland, Oregon in the pristine Willamette Valley. Their roses are virus-free and grown on their own root. Not only do they have a thick “picture perfect” rose catalog available for sale, they showcase 1,500 rose varieties at their on site display gardens. Worth a visit if you are in the area. Last June on a “garden touring” trip to Portland, my friends and I had the opportunity to stop at Heirloom Roses for a visit and spontaneous tour by their “chief rose grower”. Besides the lovely tour, she shared with us a few summer tips for roses.

One of the best tips she mentioned, and one I had never heard before was, feed alfalfa to your roses in the summer for a boost. Head over to your local feed store, rather than favorite garden center, and buy a 10lb or 25lb bag of rabbit pellet food, depending on how many rose bushes you have.

The main ingredient in rabbit food is alfalfa, and it is a lot cheaper to feed the base of your roses with 1-2 handfuls of rabbit food, than purchasing alfalfa meal supplement. As alfalfa breaks down it creates an organic fatty alcohol called triacontanol. Roses in particular, respond very favorably to triacontanol by forming new basal breaks and ensuing new growth.

Be sure and work in the rabbit food thoroughly around the base of your rose. You don’t want to tempt the rabbits in your garden with your roses. Follow up by watering thoroughly, and observe how your roses respond. Alfalfa will give your roses a nice natural boost, and another mass flowering through the summer. I tried it, and it and my roses responded beautifully.

In my research to confirm the benefits of alfalfa for roses, I read where rabbit food is not recommended for roses because of its high sugar content. There is a pricing delta between “alfalfa for gardeners” and “alfalfa for rabbits”. Returning to my bag of rabbit food for a closer look, I found alfalfa listed as the first ingredient, and amongst 33 other listed ingredients, cane molasses and corn syrup were listed last, so I wasn’t convinced that sugar was present in a large amount. If you purchase rabbit pellet food, take a quick look at the list of ingredients. Alfalfa should be first, and some form of sugar if listed at all, towards the end.

Another tip to share with you, is look for “end of summer” rose discount specials. Nurseries and retailers are eager to pass savings on to consumers, and often have wonderful prices to move inventory. Keep your eye open for these specials. Plant your new roses at the end of summer, beginning of fall, and be one step ahead of the winter “bare root rose season” for one-half to two-thirds of normal pricing.

Do you have any summer rose tips to share? What are your favorite roses in your garden, and why?

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{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

Mary Delle September 3, 2009 at 3:25 pm

Your roses look beautiful. The tip about the alfalfa is very helpful. Some organic nurseries sell it for plants. I’ve never gotten any, as I didn’t know what to use it for. Now I do. Thank you!!!

Bonnie Manion September 4, 2009 at 11:06 am

Mary Delle, alfalfa is a great tip for roses, and coming from Heirloom Roses to bout. My roses have been flourishing. It has surprised me. Thanks for your great comment….VintageGardenGal.

Jamaica September 22, 2010 at 10:51 am

Hello, great blog!
A question about the rabbit food; I have chickens that share my very small yard with about 7 or 8 HUGE climbing roses (the ones near trees are about 2nd story level now!) that have never been fed. The roses and raspberries are the only thing that survive the chickens! Anyhow.. do you know if rabbit food is dangerous for the chickens? I feed my chickens all varieties of kitchen scraps, & know that they will thrive on small amounts of just about anything, “healthy” or not, but wondering if I fertilize my roses w/ rabbit pellets, if the chickens eat too much of the pellets, will they “paste up” or anything?
As raspberries & roses are related, have you tried the pellets on berries as well?
Also do you have any organic tips for rust & powdery mildew on roses-that is easy to apply on MASSIVE shrubs?
The blooms are INCREDIBLE, but towards the end of the season, the foliage gets to looking pretty ragged. I live near the ocean, central coast CA, lots of fog.
thanks!

Bonnie Manion September 24, 2010 at 9:31 am

Jamaica, you would have to contact the specific rabbit pellet manufacturer and ask them if it was harmful to chickens. Rabbit food is about the cheapest form of alfalfa meal, but it does have other ingredients in it. When feeding your roses with rabbit food, you would want to bury the rabbit pellets deep around your roses, and not have them on the surface. Chickens do eat just about anything. As far as raspberries, you could try it. Heirloom Roses had specifically said roses and rabbit food.

Try looking up JMS Stylet Oil on the internet. There is an organic JMS Stylet Oil, they we use on our vineyard, and could work for your roses, too. Thanks for sharing..VintageGardenGal

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