Choosing and Planting Roses in Your Garden
If you enjoy roses, you can use them functionally as well as decoratively around
your grounds - as creepers, shrubs, vines, climbers, hedges or just as beds
of pure color. Rose originators are enthusiastic and tireless, and every year
new favourites appear. Most recently the headliners were the bright floribunda
rose, Jiminy Cricket; the soft, pure-pink hybrid tea rose, Queen Elizabeth;
the bright" yellow peace rose.
There are over 5,000 varieties of roses in the United States, and once you start
growing your own you are apt to change your preferences from season to season.
In selecting roses, it is important to get healthy plants. Stems should be green
and un-shriveled, roots moist and partly fibrous. The most expensive rose is
not always the best rose; it may be only a newcomer, much discussed and, therefore,
a favourite.
In general, there are two types of roses: bush roses (similar to shrubs) and
climbers (producing canes that require some sort of support). In the bush classification,
the predominant type is the hybrid tea; it accounts for over 60% of all roses
grown in America. The other major bush types are the polyanthas (roses in large
clusters), the fioribundas (large-flowered polyanthas), and the hybrid perpetuals
(vigorous growers with a great crop in June and continuous blooming throughout
the summer). The climbers include ramblers, whose long pliant canes have large
clusters of small roses that can be used for covering walls, fences and banks.
The climbers also are pillar roses, adapted to growing near buildings and on
posts and the climbing hybrid tree.
For planting roses a good garden loam with organic matter is important. It must
contain peat moss, leaf mould, compost, rotted or commercial manure, and the
bed should be prepared as far ahead of planting as is feasible in order to allow
for settling of the soil.
Fall is the best time for setting out roses, but you can plant in spring. When
your rose plants arrive from the nursery you should plant them at once. If they
have dried en route, soak the roots and put the tops in a bucket of water before
planting. Trim back any roots that are weak, long or broken at this time. Dig
a hole that is wide enough to allow the roots to spread without crowding. The
rose is properly placed when the bud (the point where the top joins the roots)
is just under the ground surface. Space them about 18 inches apart in any direction.
Prune the branches 6 to 10 inches from the soil.
To grow good roses it is necessary to cultivate, to prune and to spray. If you
have a well-cultivated bed you need not worry about watering. But if you start
to water in hot weather, you must keep it up, soaking the roots thoroughly about
once a week.
Spraying every 10 days guards against the diseases and insects that attack roses.
Nicotine sulphate wipes out the green lice; arsenate of lead is used against
chewing insects; or sulphur and arsenate of lead may be used in a dust, as may
DDT dust.
Winterise your roses by mounding sod around them after the first frost, or mulch
with straw and evergreens. In cold parts of the country, remove the supports
from the climbing roses and place the canes on the ground, peg them, and cover
with soil mounds.
In spring, cut back your roses to within 6 inches of the ground. Ruthlessly
lop off all but three or four canes on hybrid teas. This pruning will give you
strong plants. When your plants grow out from spring pruning, you will have
to disbud, cutting off all the buds except the top ones on the cane. This is
the way to grow large blossoms.
For more information on planting,roses,garden, or other house plant information visit the
related links below.