@California Garden TV

California Garden TV: FREE Simple HACK to Make Your ROSES EXPLODE With Blooms!



In this video I show you how to plant a bare root rose, how to prune roses and how to make roses explode with bloom with a simple garden hack.

VIDEO TABLE OF CONTENTS
01:24 – How to Plant a Bare root Rose
03:12 – How to Prune a Rose
04:37 – How to Make Your Rose EXPLODEWith Blooms

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Hey Guys, I’m Brian from Next Level Gardening
Welcome to our online community! A place to be educated, inspired and hopefully entertained at the same time! A place where you can learn to grow your own food and become a better organic gardener. At the same time, a place to grow the beauty around you and stretch that imagination (that sometimes lies dormant, deep inside) through gardening.

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25 Comments

  1. I'm going to try this [training].
    I have two 30 year old tea roses that keep having 8 foot growths even though the are trimmed [cut back] in the fall for the winter.

  2. Okay…maybe you can help me here, Brian. I have a very old (supposedly climbing) rose that I was given about 25 years ago. It is alive. I watched this horizontal training method years ago, and trained the long branches that way with hooks on my fence. (Not to the ground..) I HAVE gotten new growth at those nodes, but have rarely gotten flowers. I have also fertilized to no avail. Also not sure when to prune…What else can I do!?! Ty (I’m in sw Michigan)

  3. With all of the other things in the garden ,we forgot about our 40 year old rose bushes😮 They're still alive but definitely need some TLC. Thanks for reminding us 😉

  4. On the roses for what zone to grow them in, I am in zone 10B in southwest Florida and they take the heat humidity and rain so that we have here or is this more of a mild climate thanks and great video

  5. That is so helpful. Wow! I didn’t know you could do that.
    I live in the NW and we had a pretty cold winter this year, and I have a climber rose vine, I think? I don’t even know what type of rose it is, but it has beautiful while flowers and the plant grows really tall.
    My question is, if most, if not all the leaves are dead, what would you suggest I do, if I want to start training it with horizontal growth ie “ for increased blooms.”
    Thank you.

  6. COOL! I learned something new! I remember I had a forsythia, and I did a similar technique and put a brick on the tip. Worked like a charm. I never knew you can do this with roses! I am going to try it for sure. Thank you!

  7. Brian, a few videos back this month you were in your vegetable garden explaining something, in the background I noticed some strong growth of Asparagus. My question to you is “What is the variety of your Asparagus plants?”
    I also live in Zone 10-A, but on the east coast in Florida. I’ve been trying for several years now, without success, to grow Asparagus & Rhubarb.
    Can you help me?
    Thanks

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