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Theyve been by trellis of pergola i lost a lovely orange few yrs ago in winter, possibly wind, lost a yellow and another , not in same holes but same area.
Its very claggy soil there and windy. Ive fed bfb and rose food with each.
Ones that do better are one miniature climber higher up garden , better soil and drains better there and those in pots are fine.
I just cant get them to grow on trellis/pergola.
Well I used Mycorrhizal Fungi on mine, especially when planting where previous roses have been. I think it made a huge difference when I planted some new roses in exactly the same spot. It encourages a better root system which is what you want.
I would try some - it's worth the pennies as it's not cheap.
They don't really like dry soil so being "claggy" shouldn't be a problem. I'm on clay and it does them no harm. Though a good layer of well rotted manure should help.
Funny enough ive just been reading about that MF .
I shall look some up tonight.
Ive never used horse manure as my labs love eating it thinking maybe garden centre organic stuff be ok?
Perhaps if i try and dig some claggy stuff out and get some better compost and manure in.
I really dont want to lose them, present from OH when i came out of hospital again.
My roses were best ever last yr here, mustv been the sun and lack of rain /wind .
Ive got rose and shrub compost already for them .
Thanks scarlet, i love roses.
I've never tried patio roses, but when I've tried other types (not climbers, but Austens and others), I've always found them to be unhappy after two or three years in a pot, despite planting in rose/shrub compost, regular feeding, watering etc. Once I've planted them out in the ground they recover.
I think that in the longer term, trying to improve the growing conditions is the way to go.
Mostly flowers, some fruit and veg, at the seaside in Edinburgh.
Good point bramble. The pots weren't small, maybe 18" across the top, but I expect bigger would be better, just makes moving them around difficult.
At the time I had a small garden which had no room to plant more roses, but I've got a big empty garden now. I brought a Lady Emma Hamilton with me in its pot (handy to have had things already in pots when you move!), it was looking terrible, despite new soil etc. In the ground last September, looks a million dollars now.
I'd put it in the ground if possible - if it does recover you might want to try taking cuttings from it.
In the meanwhile the various supermarkets and cheapo shops often have a roses for a few pounds, so you might want to keep an eye on them and see if any of those takes your fancy.
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