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How to deal with potted roses after they bloom?

Through pruning in winter and thinning out buds in early spring, the first batch of flowers bloomed almost uniformly in May. When pruning after flowering, attention should be paid to maintaining the uniform growth of the plant shape so that future flowering will remain relatively neat.

When the flowers will wither, they need to be pruned promptly and appropriately. The method adopted is: leave 2 to 3 leaves bent from the base of the weak branches, and slightly damage the branches. Cut off the remaining flowers at the apex. Leave 3 to 4 short leaves on the branches from the base. If the branches that have not yet bloomed but have been capped during summer pruning are relatively strong, leave them for flowering. If they are weak branches, treat them as weak branches that have bloomed.

After the second batch of flowers, it enters the hot and rainy season. Most varieties are in a dormant state. The new branches are numerous, thin, uneven, and the flowers are not formed. During this period, no strong pruning is allowed. Only remove the endogenous overlapping branches and buds to keep the tree well-proportioned, ventilated and light-transparent. If necessary, remove the flower buds and maintain strong branches to prepare for the blooming period in October.

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