By: Katie Gatto

The best way to avoid having your roses die ion the winter is prevention. Plant cold-hardy roses - the shop where you purchase bushes can help advise you on which roses to buy - or plant own-root roses. These roses grow back from the roots fairly quickly, even if the plant dies.

In the fall, cut down on nitrogen fertilizers and switch to a non-nitrogen brand or cut it all out. Doing so helps your roses to harden and gives them a better change of surviving the winter. Another way to help this process is to stop deadheading in about September to ensure that your plant gets rose hips. You want rose hips to stay on the plant because they help to slow growth and prepare the plant for the winter ahead.

If disease is a special concern, be sure to clean the rose bed and protect the crown of the rose. You can choose from a couple of methods. Cover the bed with at least a foot deep of tree leaves. Oak, maple or any hardwood tree is particularly good as those species drain well and the size of the leaves provides good coverage for the crown.

Another alternative is straw or a mound made with mulch. If none of these options are available, use soil of a similar type to the soil surrounding the plant to protect the crown. Make sure to cover it after most of the season’s growing has stopped - after most of the roses you wanted to cut are rose hips - but before it gets cold.

In most places your roses should be covered no later than November 1st. Remember covering too early or too late can have an adverse effect on your rose.