A new gardening question of the day appears every day of the year on the front page of Almanac.com. Below is the answer to one of the questions from our Gardening Questions and Answers Archive where you can find over 400 more gardening questions (with answers!).
Can you please share tips on pruning AND transplanting? Which should we do first? We have inherited an overgrown rose bush that hasn't been tended to for at least 6 years, AND we have NO gardening experience. I know that it is still living, but I don’t even know what would be considered killed wood or weak, let alone "crossing" wood! We are in a temperate area, mid-Delaware, so we’re coming up on time to prune, but I don’t know how far is safe to cut it back; I sure would like to handle this grand lady with well-deserved kid-glove treatment.
You can prune this rose to an inch of its life and it will come back. Pruning should be done prior to transplanting, for two reasons. First, you are going to lose a lot of root system when you transplant; so, by pruning, you will be balancing the roots and top. Second, the transplanting will be less of a bloody affair if you prune the rose first. To be on the safe side, prune off 1/4 to 1/3 of the top. Once it leafs out, remove any dead growth you missed. --Gardening experts George and Becky Lohmiller, Hancock, New Hampshire

Make money for your school, church, or club with the NEW Almanac Fund-raiser program!
Yankee Publishing Inc., P.O. Box 520, Dublin, NH 03444, USA, (603) 563-8111
Copyright ©2009, Yankee Publishing Inc. All rights reserved.
Interactive features developed and maintained by Reinvented Inc.