Big climber bloom
By N2organics
- 5 Jul, 2009
- 5 likes
This bloom was growing on my climber rose earlier this summer. I think that the plant really loves the rich organic environment that it grows in. This was grown with NO chemicals or artificial additives.
It grows in the native soil that has been amended with dry molasses and nothing else. The biological activity in the soil around the rose bush is furious, with tons of earth-worms! {Hint: they make "worm castings" which is the richest compost on the planet}
Comments on this photo
Stimulating and maintaining healthy biological activity is the key to organics. It’s not complicated – simply avoid doing anything that hurts the life in the soil and choose only those inputs that benefit the life in the soil and that make sense from a horticultural standpoint.
GETTING STARTED
1. Stop using all synthetic fertilizers, toxic pesticides and other chemicals that harm living organisms. All high-nitrogen products are bad and nitrogen-only products are the worse.
2. Build soil health with aeration and natural organic fertilizers and amendments.
3. Use native plants and well-adapted introductions, water carefully and make wise decisions.
SOIL AMENDING - Apply compost, rock materials such as lava sand, granite, basalt and other paramagnetic materials and dry molasses to all planting areas. Use products that introduce and/or stimulate beneficial microbes in the soil.
MAINTENANCE
FERTILIZING - Broadcast organic fertilizer to the entire site 2-3 times per year at 20 lbs. per 1,000 sq. ft. Foliar feed all plants during the growing season, at least monthly with aerated compost tea or Garrett Juice. High-nitrogen salt fertilizers and products that contain synthetic material must be eliminated. Biosolid products should be avoided on food crops. Miracle-Gro, Peters, other soluble crystal-type products and Osmocote are not acceptable in an organic program.
MULCHING - Mulch bare soil around all shrubs, trees, ground covers and food crops with shredded native tree trimmings to protect the soil from sunlight, wind and rain, inhibit weed germination, decrease watering needs and mediate soil temperature. Other natural mulches can be used, but avoid Bermudagrass hay because of herbicide residue. Also avoid pine bark, cypress mulch and chemically dyed wood products. Do not pile mulch on the stems of plants.
WATERING - Water only as needed. The organic program will reduce the frequency and volume of water needed. Add a tablespoon of apple cider vinegar per gallon of water when watering pots. Use 1 ounce of liquid humate in acid soils. Garrett Juice can be used in either case. Be careful of drip irrigation systems because with those systems, it is difficult to avoid dry and waterlogged spots. Watering from above as nature does is usually best.
MOWING - Mow turf as needed and mulch clippings into the lawn to return nutrients and organic matter to the soil. Put occasional excess clippings in the compost pile. Don’t ever let clippings leave the site. Do not use line trimmers around shrubs and trees. Buffalograss lawns need less care than other grasses.
WEEDING - Hand pull large weeds and work on soil health for overall control. Mulch bare soil in beds. Avoid all synthetic herbicides including Roundup, 2,4-D, MSMA, pre-emergents, broad-leaf treatments, soil sterilants and especially the SU (sulfonylurea) herbicides such as Manage and Oust. Spray noxious weeds as needed with vinegar-based or fatty acid herbicides.
PRUNING - Do not “lift” or “gut” trees. Remove dead, diseased and conflicting limbs. Do not over prune. Do not make flush cuts. Leave the branch collars intact. Do not paint cuts. For more details, see Pruning
CONTROLLING INSECT PESTS - In general, control insect pests by encouraging beneficial insects and microbes and spraying with compost tea or the Garrett Juice mixture. Spray minor outbreaks with plant oil products including orange oil, garlic-pepper tea, and Eugene oil. Avoid all pyrethrum products, especially those containing Piperonyl butoxide (PBO), petroleum distillates and other contaminants.
CONTROLLING DISEASES - Most diseases such as black spot, brown patch, powdery mildew and other fungal problems are controlled by prevention through soil improvement, avoidance of high-nitrogen fertilizers and proper watering. Outbreaks can be stopped with sprays of potassium bicarbonate, cornmeal juice, diluted milk or the commercial product Plant Wash.
PLANTING
BED PREPARATION - Scrape away existing grass and weeds; add compost, lava sand, organic fertilizer, expanded shale, cornmeal and dry molasses and till into the native soil. Excavation of natural soil and additional ingredients such as concrete sand, peat moss, foreign soil and pine bark should not be used. More compost is needed for shrubs and flowers than for groundcover. Add greensand to black and white soils and high-calcium lime to acid soils. Decomposed granite, rock phosphate and zeolite are effective for most all soils.
5 Jul, 2009
Thanks... I've put this pic as a favourite so that I can refer to your answer.
I appreciate the detailed reply. :o)
5 Jul, 2009
Glad to help! ;-)
5 Jul, 2009
Pictures by n2organics
21 of 124
What else?
Featured on: climbing roses
Members who like this photo
-
Gardening with friends since
11 Jan, 2009 -
Gardening with friends since
14 Aug, 2008 -
Gardening with friends since
31 Jan, 2008
-
Climbing Rose Golden Climber 1 Plant Bare Root
£8.99 at Jersey Plants Direct -
Rosa 'Madame Alfred Carri?Re' (Rose Madame Alfred Carri?Re (Climbing Noisette))
£14.99 at Crocus -
Rosa 'Guinee' (Rose Guinee (Climbing Hybrid Tea))
£17.99 at Crocus -
Rosa 'Gloire De Dijon' (Rose Gloire De Dijon (Climbing Hybrid Tea))
£13.99 at Crocus -
Rosa 'Madame Gregoire Staechelin' (Rose Madame Gregoire Staechelin (Climbing Hybrid Tea))
£14.99 at Crocus
Please explain more about using the dry molasses. Thanks.
5 Jul, 2009