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Getting it to bloom

Why won't my Loving Touch Miniature Rose bloom? (and how to make it flower)

Also called Loving Touch, Miniature Apricot Rose (Rosa 'Loving Touch').

More about loving touch miniature rose

About Loving Touch Miniature Rose

Rosa 'Loving Touch' · also called Loving Touch, Miniature Apricot Rose · flowering

'Loving Touch' is a free-flowering miniature rose prized for soft apricot-buff, high-centred blooms with a light fragrance. It forms a rounded, bushy plant 40-50 cm tall that repeat-flowers from late spring to autumn. Grown in full sun and rich, well-drained soil, it excels in containers and small borders and is hardy outdoors in temperate gardens.

Plant type: flowering

Watch for — Aphids: Sap-sucking insects on buds and shoot tips; rinse off, recruit beneficial insects or apply insecticidal soap.

The reasons loving touch miniature rose isn't blooming

Almost every non-blooming loving touch miniature rose traces back to one of these, roughly in order of how common they are:

  1. Pruned at the wrong time or too hard, removing the wood the flowers would have come from.
  2. The plant is still too young or was cut back hard and is rebuilding rather than flowering.
  3. Too little sun — most flowering shrubs need several hours of direct light to bloom well.
  4. Excess nitrogen (often from lawn feed nearby) pushing leafy growth over flowers.
  5. Drought or root stress at the bud-forming time, so buds abort.

Pruning loving touch miniature rose at the wrong time and cutting off the wood that carries the flowers — the most common reason a healthy shrub never blooms.

The fix — how to get loving touch miniature rose to flower

  1. Prune at the correct time. Find out whether loving touch miniature rose flowers on old or new wood, then prune only at the time that does not remove the flowering wood.
  2. Protect the buds. Avoid hard cuts and protect developing buds from late frost and drought stress.
  3. Give it sun and the right feed. Site it in good light and use a balanced or higher-potassium feed — not a high-nitrogen one — to favour flowers.
  4. Let it mature. Give a young or hard-pruned plant a year or two to build flowering wood before expecting a full display.

Light and feeding do most of the heavy lifting here. Dial in the spot with the light guide for loving touch miniature rose and get the feeding right with the loving touch miniature rose fertilising schedule — the wrong feed (too much nitrogen) is one of the most common silent reasons a healthy plant makes leaves instead of flowers.

Bloom season and what to expect

Loving Touch Miniature Rose flowers in its established season — typically late spring through summer for a mature, correctly pruned plant — with the display improving year on year once it settles.

Post-bloom care so it flowers again

Deadhead (or leave seed heads where they protect buds), feed after flowering, and time any pruning to the plant's wood type so next year's flowers are not cut away.

For everything else this plant needs day to day, see the full loving touch miniature rose care brief and its watering schedule — a stressed, badly watered plant rarely has the energy to flower at all.

Loving Touch Miniature Rose blooming — frequently asked questions

Why won't my loving touch miniature rose flower?

Loving Touch Miniature Rose flowers on growth from a particular season — getting blooms depends on the plant being mature and on pruning at the RIGHT time so you don't remove the flowering wood. The most common reason it is not happening: Pruned at the wrong time or too hard, removing the wood the flowers would have come from.

How do I make loving touch miniature rose bloom?

Find out whether loving touch miniature rose flowers on old or new wood, then prune only at the time that does not remove the flowering wood. Avoid hard cuts and protect developing buds from late frost and drought stress.

When does loving touch miniature rose normally bloom?

Loving Touch Miniature Rose flowers in its established season — typically late spring through summer for a mature, correctly pruned plant — with the display improving year on year once it settles.

What should I do with loving touch miniature rose after it flowers?

Deadhead (or leave seed heads where they protect buds), feed after flowering, and time any pruning to the plant's wood type so next year's flowers are not cut away.

What is the single biggest mistake stopping loving touch miniature rose flowering?

Pruning loving touch miniature rose at the wrong time and cutting off the wood that carries the flowers — the most common reason a healthy shrub never blooms.

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