Why bare-root plants look dead before they grow

Why bare-root plants look dead before they grow

A March delivery of bare-root plants can feel like an accusation. You open the box expecting a garden, and what you find looks more like a bundle of sticks that spent the winter in a shed: no leaves, no soil, pale roots wrapped in damp paper or shavings, a few tight buds along the stems if you are lucky. This…

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The fruit roses make after the flowers fade

The fruit roses make after the flowers fade

By late November, roses have mostly lost their usual language. The petals are gone. The leaves are tired or already fallen. Canes that looked romantic in June have become thorny lines against a quieter garden. Then, where a flower once opened, a small red or orange fruit remains. Rose hips are easy to miss if you think of roses only…

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