How to Grow a Rose Bush From Cuttings
If you’re hoping to learn how to grow roses without too much investment or commitment right at the beginning, then you might have a friend who can help you use a different method. If you start your flower gardening more slowly, beginning with just a few cuttings, you may get a more gradual, less time and money intensive picture of your abilities before you go wholeheartedly into the endeavor. It’s worth a try to discover whether or not you can succeed.
You’ll have to pick your roses carefully, though, because not all types of roses grow well from cuttings. It’s likely some expert gardeners have managed to do it even with the difficult varieties, like hybrid teas. But if you still don’t know much about how to grow roses, or you’re not very experienced, then you will find varieties that simply will not grow by this method. Of course do some research to get specifics, but you can be fairly confident trying this with varieties like floribundas or miniatures.
You ought to do rose pruning in the first part of spring, taking several six-inch stems (or for miniatures, three-inch stems). Snip them on a slight diagonal, in the morning before the pressures of the day.
In the past, folks knew how to grow roses with cuttings safeguarded by Mason jars, and the procedure still does the trick. So once you have your cuttings, take off the bottom foliage, with just several at the top, and submerge the stems into a rooting powder. Then set them either into your garden soil or into containers of potting soil. At this point, put a Mason jar over each stem and water once in a while over the following few weeks.
In milder climates, you may be able to grow rose bushes from these cuttings just by putting them in your garden soil during the summer and forgetting about the Mason jar. On the other hand, in cooler regions, you might start them in containers indoors with a heating pad beneath them to help stimulate the roots. There are some general tips for how to grow roses from cuttings, but these need to be adapted to your particular situation. If you can induce your cuttings to root and start growing, then it might be a good, gradual way to start your rose growing hobby.
Rose gardening can be difficult if you do not have the right tools and the right skills to make them grow. But once you learn how to grow roses properly, your garden can be the envy of all the neighbors.

