Info on low maintenance rose types: David Austin roses, Knockout Roses, Carpet Flower roses. β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β
Roses have changed, and itβs about time! Today, there are easy-to-grow rosesβfrom Flower Carpet ground cover roses to Knock Out landscape roses to David Austin's climbing roses. You can truly plant and almost forget about them! Theyβre no longer intimidating prima donnas, which makes me very happy. | |
Gone are the days when endless pruning, spraying, and dusting were required to produce perfect roses. Now all you do is plant, fertilize, and water. Your reward is healthy, beautiful bushes loaded with fragrant blooms for cutting and landscaping all summer long. | | Flower Carpet roses are groundcover roses that fill your landscape with clusters of colorful blooms all summer and autumn! We love the bright scarlet, coral, and pink appleblossom colors! The Knock Out landscape roses are known to be disease-resistant and bloom every 5 to 6 weeks all season along, even without deadheading or fertilizing. | | Landscape roses such as these Knock Outs make for stunning color all season long with minimal care. Shrub roses and those grown on their own roots (such as Flower Carpet) are great choices for cold climates, but also stand up to heat, humidity, and the myriad diseases spawned by hot climates. I know, firsthand, because Iβve lived and grown roses in places from the Gulf Coast to Wisconsin. (And Iβve lost dozens of hybrid teas to -25ΒΊF winters, no matter how much mulch I heaped upon the plants!) | | Grown on its own roots, the Wedgwood Rose is a climbing rose. The charming Old Rose-style blooms are heady, with fruity perfume and a touch of cloves. Courtesy David Austin Roses. | | Flower Carpet Roses are landscape roses with a unique double root system (they have deep roots as well as soil-surface roots) that makes them able to tolerate weather conditions. βAppleblossomβ produces a profusion of pastel pink blooms. | BARE ROOT OR CONTAINER? Both bare root and container rosebushes are available this time of year. If you live north of a line drawn from San Francisco to Washington, D.C., plant either. If you are south of the line, container roses are the best choice, because your ground and air temperatures are already increasing. Soak bare root roses in a bucket of warm water overnight. Then dig a hole 18 inches wide and deep. Mix in compost or peat moss if your soil is hard and compacted. In the center of the hole, make a 12-inch-high cone of dirt. Spread rose roots over the cone. Hold rose in place with one hand and fill in the hole with the other. Firm soil and water well. Plant container roses after the last freeze of the season. Dig a hole the depth of the rose pot and 18 inches wide. Remove the plant from pot, place in center of the hole, spread roots, and fill in with soil. Water well and firm soil with the back of a shovel or your hands to eliminate air pockets. Scatter slow-release fertilizer formulated for roses around plants and scratch in with a cultivator. | | Lady Elsie May is a tough shrub rose that has flowered nonstop in my Zone 4b garden for the last 7 years. I donβt even water it! Rainfall seems to be enough. Compost mulch every spring is the only maintenance it requires. Courtesy of Angelica Nurseries. | FIVE UNUSUAL ROSE TIPS THAT REALLY WORK Plant lavender at the base of rosebushes if deer are a problem in your area. Deer are attracted by rose scent, and lavender muddies the rose aroma. Dump coffee grounds and used tea leaves around bushes. Both acidify the soil slightly, which roses love. Bury banana skins or even the entire black, mushy banana at the base of bushes to provide magnesium, an element that the plants crave. Scratch 2 tablespoons of Epsom salts into the soil around a rose. The salts make flower colors more intense. Use rabbit food for fertilizer. The pet food is composed of alfalfa meal, which supplies a growth stimulant, nitrogen, and trace elements to roses. Scratch in Β½ cup of pellets around each rose and water well. |
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