{"title":"How to Prune Roses - 7 Common Rules Explained","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/gardening/how-to-prune-roses","category":{"slug":"gardening","name":"Gardening"},"creator":{"name":"Fraser Valley Rose Farm","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCP3Ge131YXD3IqGU-NOO1kw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BN3G-wpWtFY"},"tldr":"Seven classic rose pruning rules explained: which ones still matter, which are outdated. Practical spring pruning guide from a working rose farm.","totalDurationSeconds":839,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Felco bypass pruners","Small pruning saw","Thornproof gardening gloves"],"materials":["Rubbing alcohol or disinfecting spray (for cleaning blades between plants)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Start When the Early Shrubs Bloom","text":"The old rule is to start pruning when forsythia blooms. Forsythia is the bright yellow shrub that flowers at the end of winter - when you see it open, nature has mostly cleared the risk of killing frost.Use that as the beginning of your pruning window, not the only time you can prune. Repeat-blooming roses (hybrid teas, floribundas, most modern shrub roses) can be pruned from then through mid-summer. Once-blooming roses and old garden roses should wait until after their first spring bloom - prune them too early and you'll lose the flowers for the whole year."},{"number":2,"title":"Remove Dead, Diseased, Damaged, and Crossing Stems First","text":"This is the most important step and the one that can't possibly hurt the rose. Healthy stems at pruning time are green, red, or orange. Dead and dying stems are gray, dark brown, peeling, cracked, or split.Follow any bad stem down from the tip until the color returns to healthy green. Cut just above that point. Remove any branches that cross and rub against each other - the rubbing wears through the bark in the wind and invites disease. Start here and you can't make your rose worse."},{"number":3,"title":"Cut Above an Outward-Facing Bud","text":"Look along a stem for the small bumps where new growth emerges - those are buds. An outward-facing bud points away from the center of the plant.Cut a quarter inch above one of those, and the next shoot should grow outward rather than into the middle of the rose. That keeps the plant from getting congested. The rule is worth following but don't obsess over it - roses often send up shoots from buds you didn't choose, and there's nothing you can do about that."},{"number":4,"title":"Skip the Harsh Vase Shape Rule","text":"Old textbook advice says prune down to three to seven canes in a vase shape, eighteen to twenty-four inches from the ground. That's way too harsh for most roses.This rule was written for hybrid teas and floribundas where you want one big early bloom flush. Apply it to a climber, shrub rose, old garden rose, or once-bloomer and you'll damage the plant and lose most of that season's flowers. Prune for the finished size you actually want the plant to hold, not to an arbitrary textbook number."},{"number":5,"title":"Use Clean, Sharp Bypass Pruners","text":"A bypass pruner makes clean cuts that heal well. Felco is the industry favorite. For any stem thicker than your finger, switch to a small pruning saw - pruners that struggle crush the stem instead of slicing it.Sharpen the blade at the start of the season. Between plants, wipe the blade with rubbing alcohol or a disinfecting spray. Rose viruses can travel on sap, so a dirty blade can spread disease from one infected plant to the rest of your garden."},{"number":6,"title":"Ignore the Angled Cut Rule","text":"You'll hear that every cut needs to be angled away from the bud so rain runs off. That's a myth. The whole stem gets wet when it rains, regardless of cut angle, and dries at the same rate.Straight cuts are faster, easier, and heal identically. Skip sealing cuts with glue, wax, or nail polish too - decades of horticulture research have shown sealing pruning cuts does nothing useful. Don't make a simple task harder than it needs to be."},{"number":7,"title":"Shape for Openness and Size","text":"Step back and look at the whole plant. A well-shaped rose is open in the middle - air and light reach the inner branches, which cuts down on disease and helps the plant flower evenly.Trim any stems crowding the center and control the overall height so the flowers stay at a level you can see and smell. What counts as a pleasing shape varies by the variety and by your personal taste. There's no one right answer - aim for clean, open, and the right size for the spot."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-19T14:05:23.718Z","published":"2026-04-21T22:09:40.410Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}