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It’s time for a more light-hearted approach to gardening,
don’t you think? We’re swamped by all manner of experts
telling us how to grow this and that from seeds, cuttings and division.
Now that’s all very well of course, but I prefer to have a
bash at it myself and in my own inimitable fashion. The ‘Let’s
Just See What Happens’ School of Philosophy.
If the roses
have a touch of black spot, powdery mildew or some other strange
deviation from the norm, then try emptying the contents of the washing-up
bowl over them after your evening meal. Warm washing-up liquid,
remnants of soggy Tuna and Pasta, fluid-like dregs of chocolate
ice-cream, garlic sauce, who knows it might just do the trick, it
might just work, it’ll certainly make you feel better anyway,
make you feel as if you’re doing something about it. And anyway,
who’s got the time to spend hours in the Garden Centre wandering
aimlessly amidst brightly packaged accessories each time one of
your prized plants shows signs of deterioration or death? Easier
to pull it up, isn’t it? Burn it and then buy yourself a new
one (burning is the preferred method, is it not - eradicate all
disease by fire?) Or do you commit the cardinal sin of chucking
it over the fence into your neighbour’s garden when no one
else is looking!
There’s
been some serious research, of course, conducted into all things
horticultural over the last decade or so and some of it quite fascinating.
I saw a very interesting gardening program on the television last
year, all about pruning roses it was, a Friday night gardening program
if I recall correctly. So there I was, relaxed, spread-eagled on
the sofa, telly on, bottle of wine drunk, fish supper scoffed, when
a bright and breezy gardening expert pops up to discuss the problems
of pruning roses and how best to go about it. Very interesting it
was. Fascinating in fact.
One
batch of roses (roses with an extraordinary name, something along
the lines of ‘Sexy Rexy’ or ‘Great Maiden’s
Blush’) were lightly trimmed in the way that it’s supposed
to be done, the way the experts do it (and which way is that now?).
The
second batch were cut to within six inches of ground level with
a joiner’s saw, and very neatly too.
And
the third batch, decimated with a chainsaw. Hacked to pieces!
And do you
know, they all grew back the same, fine and healthy, although the
ones chopped with a chainsaw were a tad smaller as one might expect
The moral of
the story?
When pruning
roses (or anything else for that matter) use whatever comes to hand.
And if it needs pruning now, then prune it now. Use the sewing scissors,
the carving knife or anything else that’s lying around, even
the lawn-mower! Why not? You might be pleasantly surprised.
Happy pruning.
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