Drink Magazine

Pruning Rambling Roses

By Alip @alisonpikeGD

I have to admit this is not really a job I look forward to because at the end of it I do tend to look like I have been dragged through a hedge backwards and that ‘hedge’ is covered in thorns.  My advice long sleeves, trousers (not a job to be done on a hot day) and some very good gloves.

All rambling roses flower once usually in early summer and produce a mass of new shoots each  year.  If left unpruned they quickly become a tangled mess and  produce fewer flowers.

The roses I have been battling with are Rosa ‘Félicité Perpétue’ a vigorous rambler that in this instance is trained over a fence.  I am pretty ruthless with these roses as they are on the edge of a driveway so not only do they need to look neat they also need to not get in the way of cars.  As you can see from the picture they are all over the place!

Unpruned Rosa 'Félicité Perpétue'

The first thing I do is remove all of the stems that have flowered this year, cutting them right back to the base.  In this situation I only need around 8-9 new shoots that are then trained against the fence, so the weaker new shoots and any that are going off in a funny direction are also removed at this stage.  The picture below gives you an idea as to the amount of material I remove and what I am then left with.

Pruning Rosa 'Félicité Perpétue'

The last thing to do is then tie in the new shoots and if they have developed any side shoots I shorten these by about two thirds.  I’m left with a good tidy plant that will cover the fence with its clusters of fragrant creamy/pink flowers next year.

Pruning Rosa 'Félicité Perpétue' and training against a fence

How to prune Rosa 'Félicité Perpétue'

As I have said I am pretty ruthless with these roses because of the position they are grown in.  If your rambling roses are being used in a more traditional way then you really only need to remove about a third of the old shoots back to the base along with the obligatory three ‘d’s’ (damaged, dead,

How to prune rambling roses
diseased). Shorten the side shoots as mentioned previously and tie in the new growth.  Also those that bare hips can be pruned after they have done there thing, I have to fore go these because it is so unruly in this situation (to put it simply it is a case of the wrong rose for the situation it should really be a climber and not a rambler!).

Best of luck and remember your gloves!!

Training rambling roses


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