You can plant almost straight away. It's glysophate so it will break down on contact with the soil. When I used it before I left it a day then planted something with no problem.
Can anyone help me, we were given a hybrid tea rose for our anniversary which grew away very well last year. However I noticed today that there are what I think are suckers from half way up the stem, it has seven leaves and I have been told that is the sign of a sucker. Is this correct ? and should I take them off.
Is this rose one of the new English roses like the ones developed by David Austin - they have various species roses in their parentage and sometimes have different leaf formations to the usual HT roses.
As Nut says, suckers would come from the root.
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
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You can plant almost straight away. It's glysophate so it will break down on contact with the soil. When I used it before I left it a day then planted something with no problem.
Fantastic! Thanks very much Dave.
Can anyone help me, we were given a hybrid tea rose for our anniversary which grew away very well last year. However I noticed today that there are what I think are suckers from half way up the stem, it has seven leaves and I have been told that is the sign of a sucker. Is this correct ? and should I take them off.
Annie, you probably need to start a new thread, this one is about Resolva and the rose experts (not me) won't be looking.
But I do know that 7 leaflets doesn't mean a sucker. and that suckers don't grow from half way up a stem, they come from the root
In the sticks near Peterborough
Is this rose one of the new English roses like the ones developed by David Austin - they have various species roses in their parentage and sometimes have different leaf formations to the usual HT roses.
As Nut says, suckers would come from the root.
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
Thanks nut cutlet I'll do that tomorrow. Annie