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opheliathornvt

Interior cane color when pruning

I've been pruning my roses since the forsythia is blooming now, and it isn't pretty. My roses don't get too big in a normal year, but this winter was exceptionally hard on them and I can't believe how far down I am pruning.
Anyway, my question is about how to tell a healthy cane from a dead one when you cut into it. I understand that brown or tan interiors are bad,and that white is good, but is the important section the very center of the cane, or the rest of it? If I have a cane with green bark on the exterior, then some white area, and at the very center a brown circle, will that cane live, or is it damaged? Is the important area the very center part, or the cane between the bark and the center? I hope that's clear. I'd post a photo, but I'm computer challenged. Thanks for any help.

Comments (7)

  • mad_gallica (z5 Eastern NY)
    9 years ago

    It depends on the age of the cane, and the type of rose. Older canes on large, hardy roses can produce a type of brown heartwood that is the same as the interior of trees. It isn't a sign of anything other than the cane being a few years old. The determining factor in pruning it out is how well it leafs out.

    Hybrid teas here don't get a chance to develop big, several year old canes. So the pruning involves canes that are young enough that they should only have white centers. My DH spent this afternoon pruning old canes from Captain Samuel Holland. Those are almost 2 inches in diameter, and very different in character from something you would find on a tender rose in this climate.

  • opheliathornvt zone 5
    Original Author
    9 years ago

    Thanks. Maybe my best bet is to prune later in the spring, after I see where the new buds are coming. I wanted to do an experiment and leave some canes with different kinds of interior colors and see what happened, but I'm not that organized, I guess.

  • seil zone 6b MI
    9 years ago

    If it has a layer of green and then white I'd be inclined to leave it and wait and see. It's still very early and my roses have not even started to bud out yet. I'm waiting on some to see if there's any growth. It makes it a lot easier to tell what's good cane. You can always go back and do some more pruning later on. I usually have to do that anyway.

  • opheliathornvt zone 5
    Original Author
    9 years ago

    Thank you so much for the input. It's wonderful to have the opportunity to learn from those who have been growing roses longer than I have.

  • dublinbay z6 (KS)
    9 years ago

    On HTs, there is a temptation to leave the "iffy" canes unpruned--the ones with some white but with a small tannish center. Sometimes that may work, but I have found that other times, leaving those canes unpruned meant that the rose bloomed during the spring cycle and then started giving up trying by mid-summer--underdeveloped blooms, sparsely blooming--and sometimes just fading away by the end of summer. To me, it seems like they use up all their energy in the spring and have little or nothing left to make it through the rest of the season. In those cases, it would have been better to prune drastically prune them and encourage the new growth from the healthy portion that is left.

    I know it is discouraging to prune those HTs nearly to the ground, but they will start growing and be looking terrific before the spring cycle is over--I promise! I sometimes think HTs thrive a bit on severe prunings.

    Kate

  • opheliathornvt zone 5
    Original Author
    9 years ago

    Thanks, Kate - I thought I might have read that somewhere here. Is it the same for all roses, not just hybrid teas? I actually have more than aren't HTs than that are.

  • susan4952
    9 years ago

    And thanks from me, Kate. I value your opinion so much. I currently have about 60 nubbins that used to be ht's. You comments give me hope. And the way you phrase your advice is always so positive.
    Susan