Print This Article Post Comment Add To Favorites Email to Friends Ezine Ready

How To Climb Roses And Vines With A Trellis

By: John Morris Home | Home-and-Family | Landscaping-Gardening


Climbing roses and vines are beautiful and visually appealing. The easiest way to achieve this is to use a trellis. Below are 12 helpful tips to get you started.

1. Twiners

Honey suckle, clematis and morning glories are among the many vines that twine. These plants have one of the following: twining leaves or twining stems. Plants having twining leaves use their leaves like a stem, or a tendril; the leaves are capable of twisting around strings, wires or twigs, but it has to be thin enough so the leaf could curl around. Twining stems however can twist around to whatever they come into contact with.

2. Scramblers

Climbing roses and bougainvillea are the best example for this category. Scramblers have stems that are very long and have thorns. They look like vines, but are unable to climb on their own. They should be supported by an arbor, pagoda or a trellis and be tied unto the structure.

3. Adhesive Pads

The Virginia creeper and the Boston ivy possesses stem tendrils which allow them to stick to any surface by means of their touch sensitive adhesive pads.

4. Clinging Stem Roots.

The stems of such plants cling and stick itself to any surface. These plants stick so well, that they can damage the paint of the wall if you try to remove them. Examples are the

- English ivy
- Irish ivy
- Euonymus

5. Choose what type of vine to plant

Roses need to have at least six hours of sunlight and a well-drained, fertile soil.

6.Plant your rose as soon as possible

Buy climbing roses as bareroot plants. When at this stage, they are dormant and easy to handle as well as to plant. In the early spring or late winter is the season to plant bareroot, when the soil is not frozen anymore and can be worked on. At this time, the roots will have plenty of time to get established before summer.

7. Choose a type of support

A trellis will be a good choice. Roses will grow more flowers if the structural cane is growing horizontally. Select a trellis that you have easy access when pruning time comes. Also, it should be sturdy enough to hold the rose vine in wet as well as in windy weather.

8. Installing the trellis

Ideally, you should install the trellis first before planting the roses. Make sure that the structure is secured well into the ground, as well as it should be strong to handle the weight of the plant when it matures. If installing it against a wall, set it a few feet away from the wall to provide air circulation and easy maintenance.

Plant The Roses

When digging a hole, it should be about eighteen to thirty inches from the base of the trellis. A mixture of compost and superphosphate is then added to the soil.

Attach The Canes

Choose the strongest structural cane and tie them onto the trellis with a loose and stretchy cloth, a panty hose is a good example. Evenly space them and preferably close to the horizontal.

Maintenance

For at least two years, let your climbers grow and do not prune them. Just remove the dead leaves and branches. Once established, you can then prune damaged and overcrowded canes, and be sure to tie in new canes as replacement. Also, during the dormant season, flowering side shoots are to be pruned two or three buds above the structural cane.

9. Selecting a trellis for your garden:

Strength

Consider the strength of the trellis to be put up in your garden. Climbing vines are heavy, so the trellis should be very sturdy to withstand the weight of the vine.

Durability

The material to be used in building a trellis should be weather proof. Pressure treated wood, galvanized bolts and nails are sturdy enough to endure outdoor climate.

Shape

Fans and arches are the popular shapes in trellis forms. Consider though, the look of your garden. If you have a Victorian garden, then an arched trellis would match with it. However, if you have garden with a Japanese theme, then consider too, a trellis with a somewhat Japanese form.

Height

The height of your trellis will also depend on your garden. Before buying a trellis, take the time to measure your desired trellis height.



Article Source: http://www.eArticlesOnline.com

About the Author:
For more great trellis related articles and resources check out http://trellis.lawnngardens.com

Tags: , , , ,

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Landscaping-Gardening Articles Via RSS!

Recent Related Articles From Landscaping-Gardening

  • Pruning Roses
    By: Colin Clifford | Jul 5th 2007
    Roses seem to grow and produce flowers for only a few years before becoming exhausted and starting to develop flowers down the lower part of the stem.Pruning is therefore needed to prvent the plant becoming a tangled mass of dying and living wood with inferior blooms. Read

  • The Meanings Of The Numbers Of Roses
    By: rose for love! | Nov 28th 2007
    There are meanings hidden in the number of roses exchanged between people. Some of these meanings have been derived from visual significance, while some have caught on from popular stories and myths. Our comprehensive guide to the numbers and meanings of roses is your resource for rose interpretation. Read

  • Bouquets Roses For Valentines's Day
    By: Radhika Mohan | Feb 8th 2010
    Roses and Valentines Day for this valentine day celebrities for him and her Multi colored roses. And roses are Symbols to express your love on Valentine’s Day. Read the articles about this Valentine’s at findnearyou.com, written by Shweta Subbiah Read

  • Preparing To Grow Roses, Or Laying The Foundation

    Having chosen the location and decided upon the size and shape of your beds, you are next ready to prepare the soil. Rev. F. Page-Roberts, an ex-president of the National Rose Society of England, has said: "After years of rose-growing in places far apart, I think it is not so much the soil and the climate, as the care and s ... Read

  • Love Is Much Like A Wild Rose
    By: http://www.a1roses.com/ | Oct 23rd 2009
    People from all over the world spend millions on roses every year on all special days. This is to show that there is a deeper meaning when it comes to different flowers and more so roses. Roses, the mere sight of them makes people feel special. Read

  • How To Safely Remove Thorns From Roses Without Damaging The Rose Or Yourself
    By: Gregg Hall | Jul 17th 2007
    One of the unfortunate negatives of roses has to be the thorns. The act of removing the thorns doesn't have to be one that injures you or the plant itself if you just follow some simple steps. You just have to have a little patience and take some precautions as we show in this article. Read

  • How To Propagate Your Roses Through The Proper Use Of Rose Cuttings
    By: Gregg Hall | Jul 16th 2007
    Roses were spread across the U.S. when early pioneers brought their rose cuttings with them in mason jars to plant them in the new areas they were moving to. This art of propagating roses has been around since Victorian times and it remains one of the easiest and most enjoyable endeavors for anyone with a garden. Read

  • How To Make Valentine's Day Flowers Last A Lifetime
    By: Ava Rose | Dec 10th 2008
    Want to send flowers on Valentine's Day that will last forever? Read

  • How To Add Climbing Roses To Your Landscape.
    By: shashi pal | Apr 19th 2008
    What is more beautiful than seeing a home or building with an arch of climbing roses in the landscaping? Climbing roses are one of many plants that branch out and intertwine themselves among arches, trellises, or even buildings and railings. They can add a great landscape element to any foundation Read

  • Floribunda Roses
    By: Colin Clifford | Aug 18th 2007
    Floribunda roses were created in 1909, the first polyantha/hybrid tea cross, "Gruss an Aachen" latin for "many flowering" Read


Copyright © 2005-2011 eArticlesOnline, LLC - All Rights Reserved
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy