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How to Prune Flowers to Create Beautiful Blooms Every Year

There are many reasons you should prune flowers in your yard, and today you can learn how and why I prune mine to produce the most!

There are many reasons you should prune flowers in your yard, and today you can learn how and why I prune mine to produce the most!

Happy Thursday! Today, I am sharing with you my first gardening-like post. When we began renting this house, I was pleasantly surprised to acquire two rose beautiful rose bushes; one is light pink and one is hot pink but looks red sometimes too.

Do you have rose bushes? Would you like to have one? Apparently, you can’t kill a rose bush!! Unless you never ever prune it for a very long time.

pruning roses

Why do I prune my rose bushes? Well, because of the hundreds of roses that come out because I prune the bush frequently. Just look at the picture below! This bush is the one in my backyard, it is getting a little unruly at this point; you can see how it has started to grow up really high and down toward the ground. But now that the roses are blooming, I can’t bring myself to do prune anything but the dead roses.

Which parts should you prune and where? As you can see below, this is what a rose looks like after all of the petals have fallen to the ground. If you haven’t pruned the rose before this point, you definitely want to do it now!

rose pruning

You need to cut the stem down at the next set of leaves. I use regular scissors to do this. When I prune the entire bush, I use large clippers.

how to prune flowers

This is a close-up of the dead part of the stem/rose that you want to cut off. You will see a lot of these and need to cut them back as quickly as they come so that you can get more new roses!

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How to Prune Flowers to Create Beautiful Blooms Every Year

How often do I prune the bushes? I cut them back at the end of the Fall (when they are finished blooming) and the beginning of the Spring (before they begin blooming). This is when I prune the bush to the shape and size that I prefer.

I cut the inside stems shorter than the outside stems because the middle always seems to grow taller. While the rose bush is blooming, I prune individual dead roses and stems. That’s it! It’s actually very simple. Rose bushes love full sunlight and there is no need to water; they thrive off of what they get from the rain.

pruning plants

See how the buds are about to explode open??? Ohhh I just LOVE it!!!

More of What You Love: Check Out These Recommended Posts!

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 This rose was hiding down in the middle of the bush 🙂

When life hands you too many roses what do you do? You make rose water of course!

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If you loved these ideas then you’ll definitely want to browse some of my other Gardening projects that are full of step-by-step tutorials as well as freebies galore! Can’t wait to see you again and happy planting!

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8 Comments

  1. I love growing roses and blogging about them, too! I agree- you should prune and prune often, removing old blooms and any broken, damaged or diseased foliage, stems and canes.

    Here in Florida we have Black Spot like crazy! It just rained for 14 days straight, was hot humid and well, no doubt the Black Spot found my roses. Only one or two leaves on all but one bush… and that bush was eat up with it. So, time to break out the Dawn dish liquid and treat them.

    Great post and beautiful roses!

    (Stopping by from the Weekend Retreat Linky!)

    1. Hi Stephanie,
      Thank you for the lovely comments 🙂 Luckily, I do not have Black Spot on my roses, but I do have it on my aloe plant! Thank you for the tip about the Dawn dish liquid because I did not know that; I am definitely a novice gardener! I love that roses are so easy to take care of, I feel like I do very little and they are just so beautiful all the time! I hope you stop by again for some of our other posts 🙂

  2. omg! Your roses are freaking amazing! Obviously the explosion of color is worth a little work with pruning. My grandfather has a rose bush and never takes care of it and I can tell you I’ve never seen a (home) rose bush with quite so much color!

    (fund you through the sugar bee linky)

    1. Kat,
      Thank you so much! I do appreciate the beauty every day I see them; they make me very happy! 🙂 Maybe you should “help” your grandfather prune his rose bush!! You might be surprised with the results and maybe he will like it too! Thank you for stopping by and stay tuned for my upcoming Rose Water post next week!

  3. I love roses, at one point we had 20+ rose bushes, I planted them 7 years ago and I love the old bourbon roses, or cabbage roses, the ones that look like peonies. But over the last two cold winters we have lost 4 or 5 of them. And I used to prune, I am kinda over it! I have a rugosa rose that you cannot prune, and right now it is my favorite! Before I started blogging I would spend 2 or 3 hours everyday in the summer between the garden and pruning, I just don’t have that kind of time anymore. I think I need to rethink the landscaping, but hate to kill living plants, so I will wait a year or so. They are gorgeous, but a lot of work!

    1. Nikki,
      Yes, it is a lot of work, but I only prune like once a week! If I had more than two bushes, I would probably be overwhelmed! Stay tuned for another cool rose post I have coming this week 🙂

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