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my husband bought me a mini rose bush for v-day. i love in florida and i put them outside they start turning yellow. what should i do to keep them alive. it says they need sun but cant get any if i leave them inside. help

2007-03-13 07:02:11 · 4 answers · asked by schie2005 1 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

4 answers

If they had been used to lower light while they were wherever they were before they came to you, then putting them outside in full sun all at once would be a bit of a shock, and would "burn" them.

Plants that have been grown inside need to be acclimated. Put them in the sun for a few hours - or in a protected spot outside that naturally gets just a few hours of direct sun a day. Gradually increase the exposure until they are handling the amount of sun they will get in the spot you eventually wish to transplant them too.

I'm assuming you are keeping the soil moist if it's in a pot. Pots outside dry much quicker than plants in the ground.

After transplanting, water with a root stimulator - which encourages it to establish itself in the ground. You can fertilize it later, after it has recovered from the transition.

2007-03-13 07:09:46 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Mini florist roses are not normally inteded for the garden, but you can plant them in the garden.

1. Wait until after your frost free date to plant out side.
2. Roses need at least 6 hrs of sun
3. Fertilize your rose. Yellowing normally means a nitrogen defecency. Most greenhouse crops are liquid fed which means the food runs out when the plant is shipped to the retailer.
4. Roses like moist, but well drained soil. Rule of thumb about an inch of water a week.
5. Be careful not to over water. The cause of most plant ills.
6. Be prepared for leaf diseases. These florist roses were selected to look good on the table for two weeks. Most are not disease resisant. If you live in California or nevada you have a fighting chance - low humidity means less disease.
7. Consider buying a garden roses noted for its disease resistance.

2007-03-13 07:36:02 · answer #2 · answered by The Plant Hunter 3 · 0 0

Mini Roses are pampered in a Nursery before they are bought and are used to ideal 'constant' conditions. When its placed outside with dramatic temperature changes it could have gone into shock.

I had two mini azalea's for Easter that went into shock and drop their leaves when put outside. One didn't survive the winter.

Also yellowing leaves could be a sign of too much or not enough water. Is the bush still in the pot? Did you soak it WELL before you planted it?

These are come causal reason but roses have good recuperative powers after things are corrected.

2007-03-13 07:15:00 · answer #3 · answered by Ronatnyu 7 · 0 0

purely plant them outdoors now. in case you have already got buds they might desire to be good to pass interior the floor. some have rose hips interior the wintry climate so I trim them to 0.5 length interior the spring before they start to leaf out. interior the southern US we prune interior the spring yet up north they now and back trim in fall. We purely plant in a properly drained section and use a good fertilizer. lots relies upon on the place you reside. i understand you will relish them this summer time and for destiny years.

2016-10-18 07:05:59 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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