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Potted Rose Bush Losing It's Leaves


Gold Post Medal for All Time! 858 Posts
April 3, 2008
Potted Rose Bush

Question:

My husband bought me a potted rose bush with baby roses on it. It is, of course, in the house, as we live in Iowa and it is WAY too cold to put outside. My concern is that it is dropping almost all of it's leaves. Not sure why. They just seem to be drying up and dropping off. I try to keep it watered, but maybe I'm not enough? Maybe too much?
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Also, the rose buds that had not opened when I got it have dried up and definitely will not be opening up now. This is my first rose bush and I really want it to survive. Can anyone give me any tips on how to properly care for it? We keep our house fairly cool, at 60 degrees, but according to the information on the pot, they grow best between 60 and 80 degrees.

I am also keeping it where it can get the best benefit of the sun. My house isn't super light, but it's not dark either. I keep it in front of windows, but several feet back from the window so it won't get too cold. Thanks ahead of time for any advice anyone can give me.

Robin from Washington, IA

Answer:

Indoors, miniature roses require the same care as they would outdoors. They need lots of sunlight, slightly moist soil, adequate fertilizer, and a fair amount of humidity (tough with dry winter air) to grow successfully. Nearly any type of rose can be grown in pots, but in general, miniature rose varieties do best because of their compact growing habits.
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The most common reason roses fail is improper watering. If buds and flowers start to look dry and shriveled, and leaves are suddenly dropping, the plant is drying out and should be watered immediately.

The best way to water is to place the pot on a tray and water from below the foliage. When water runs freely into the tray, stop watering. Allow the water to drain into the saucer for a few more minutes and then dump any excess water that remains in the tray. Never let the pot stand in water. The goal is to keep the soil slightly moist, but NOT wet.

Yellow leaves can be a sign of too much water or not enough light. If your pot came wrapped in foil, remove it so excess water can escape and move it to the brightest area possible (preferably a south-facing window). If you can't provide it with at least 5 hours of direct sunlight a day, you might want to consider supplementing it with an artificial grow light until you can get it into the garden. If you think you may have over-watered, let the soil dry out before resuming watering, and remember that with fewer leaves, it now needs less water.

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At 60F, temperature is probably not your problem. Humidity may be a factor, as miniature roses do not like warm, dry air. Setting the pot on a pebble tray filled with water will help keep the air around it more humid.

Keep in mind that roses forced to bloom in the winter will be difficult to keep looking good until spring if kept indoors. This does not mean they will be lost, it just means that they may not look the greatest by the time spring rolls around. If your rose bush has lost many leaves, you may want to cut it back to about 2-3 inches, or to the point where you see a healthy, green-white stalk. New growth should reappear in 6-10 days.

Good luck!

Ellen

 

Comments

By Susan (Guest Post)
February 25, 20081 found this helpful
Top Comment

Hi, have you try banana peels ? My roses were in misery a couple months ago because of the rain and lacked of sunshine. Then I fed them banana peels (just planted the peels in the soil), only a few days after that, they grew some new leaves and new buds too.

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I water my roses every 2-3 days, only when the soil looked dry (my potted roses are protected from the heavy rain). Maybe your roses have too much water since they stay indoor and the soil need more time to get dry, they also need good air circulation.

 
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Questions

Here are the questions asked by community members. Read on to see the answers provided by the ThriftyFun community.

November 1, 2020

Yesterday, I just bought a rose plant and today I repotted it. Overnight, the leaves of my plant are wilting and drying out though the soil is quite moist.

I don't know why is this happening!

A wilting rose plant in a pot.
 

Answers


Bronze Post Medal for All Time! 105 Posts
November 3, 20200 found this helpful
Best Answer

I grow a lot of rose plants here and start them by cutting most of the time. When I transplant one of the plants into a larger pot it can go into shock as your plant has done here. Overwatering the plant is not good. I would suggest that you do this right now. Remove the plant from your new pot and mix some dryer soil in with the wet soil and plant the rose bush back in the pot. Do not sit this out in direct sunlight for a few days. Every 3 days add just a bit of water to the pot to keep the soil moist but not too wet. The leaves will soon be fine and the plant will come out of shock.

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A lot of plants are sensitive when transplanted to larger pots and they do go into shock when this one happens. Most of the time it will take a few days for the plant to adjust and be fine. Right now I am not sure what season you are in but if you are in fall and just before winter I would not leave the plant outside for the winter. You can place the plant on a covered patio or even in your home until it gets a good start. Just make sure you give the plant plenty of light and sit it near a window.

 

Gold Feedback Medal for All Time! 949 Feedbacks
November 3, 20200 found this helpful
Best Answer

You made a big change in this plant's life as you brought it home from probably a controlled environment and did not give it a chance to acclimate itself to your environment before removing it from it's home to a larger pot and different type of soil.

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Transplanting is a major change for a plant and almost always the plant will go into temporary shock and may wilt and loose it's leaves. Sometimes the plant does not recover or it could take several days/weeks for it return to its formal health.

Be sure you do not place this plant in direct sunshine for at least 2-3 weeks and then only gradually until it looks healthy enough to stand full sunshine. Roses require 5-8 hours of sunshine a day but not when they are freshly transplanted.
The soil should be similar to the type that it had originally and the pot should have excellent drainage (hopefully the new pop was not a lot larger than the original pot).
Let the soil dry almost completely before adding water and then give it a good soaking in another pan/pot as you should not get water on the leaves or you'll wind up with 'black spot' on your plant. Do not fertilize until you're ready to place it in the sunshine and then only small amounts.

 
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August 18, 2019

I was on vacation for over a month and I left my roses in the care of someone while I was away. When I left, my roses where growing new leaves, so I was hoping to see at least a bud or two when I returned, but sadly all the leaves that grew dried out. The person I left in charge of caring for my roses to said that they watered them. Leaves Died on Rose Bushes - nude rose bush stems

 

I don't know if my roses where affected by something before I left or the person didn't watered them like they said, or I just didn't take care of them right that caused all the leaves to become dry. Right now, I have cut off all the dry leaves and I don't know what else I should do. Now I am seeing some sort of liquid coming out from some of the areas of the plant. Does anyone have any advice on what I should do to revive my roses? And what is that liquid that is coming out?

Leaves Died on Rose Bushes
 
Leaves Died on Rose Bushes
 

Answers

August 19, 20191 found this helpful

I understand how you feel. I love flowers too including roses. One of my favorites.
It's the season where leaves shed and i am positive that it will grow back in its season if you care and nurture it. Your rose plant doesn't seem to have completely died down and dried out. So you don't have to worry. This is a part of its cycle.
Take good care of her and she will bloom in time.

 

Gold Post Medal for All Time! 677 Posts
August 19, 20190 found this helpful

Spray with an organic disease control product. You still have green spots so the plant isnt dead.

 

Bronze Feedback Medal for All Time! 196 Feedbacks
August 19, 20190 found this helpful

Awww....poor roses.

The brown looks like a canker or fungus. You can try cleaning it off with some plain Blue Dawn dish soap and see if that keeps it at bay. If it comes back, you may need a fungicide. Ask at your local hardware store or big box hardware store like Home Depot which one they recommend for the particular breed of rose you have.

My husband mowed over mine many years ago with the electric and it looked much worse than yours does now and mine came back better than ever! Roses are very hearty sorts and she should recover fully.

Take care of the brown spots. Go back to your regular water and sun routine and hopefully soon she will return to her full glory.

Post back with an update.

 

Bronze Post Medal for All Time! 105 Posts
August 19, 20190 found this helpful

In many parts of the world roses have a season where they look like they die off and the leaves fall off the plants. When the next growing season comes the plant will sprout new leaves and start to grow again. Where I live we do not have a growing season such as this because we are not subject to the cold. Therefore our roses grow year round and bloom all the time. Your plants do not look dead right now and I would just water them every 2 days and keep checking them. You might want to try a little bit of furtilizer in the water to help them out.

 
October 28, 20190 found this helpful

What kind of organic to spray

 
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