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Meandering along a garden path, spilling gracefully
over an arbor, releasing heady perfume by a French door — roses
are the stuff of sonnets — and notoriously temperamental. If you
love roses, you’ll love these tips on growing them and enjoying
their beauty.
- Roses are sun worshippers, so plant them where they’ll receive
5-6 hours of sun a day.
- Prevent weeds and lock in moisture by mulching around the base of
each rosebush. Avoid watering overhead; wet leaves promote disease.
Water the roots 3-4 mornings a week, using a drip irrigation system.
Put it on a timer, and you’ll never have to worry.
- Fertilize roses 2-3 times throughout the growing
season with a slow-release
granular fertilizer formulated especially for roses.
- For low maintenance roses, select disease-resistant
species, such
as Alba and Rugosa roses. Roses require good air circulation to stay
healthy, so plant them several feet apart and prune to keep space between
the bushes.
- Soften the lines of a rose bed with a curvy
border. Create the border
with landscape edging, then plant the tallest roses in the center
and shorter roses at the ends of the bed.
- Cut blossoms in the morning, choosing tight buds that will open indoors.
Drop a penny into the vase before arranging. The copper deters bacteria,
so the roses last longer.
The Right Type Roses
Roses come in all shapes, sizes and colors. They smell spicy, fruity,
musky or not at all. They look spectacular with other plants or stop
traffic on their own. For maximum impact, fill your garden with a variety
of roses in the same color family, then sit back and enjoy the show.
Hybrid Tea Roses are graceful, upright bushes that produce one flower
per stem. Their fragrant, old-fashioned flowers look beautiful in a formal
bed.
Floribundas are bushy shrubs that produce “candelabra” clusters
of blooms. They work best in a border or as low-growing hedges that enclose
a garden or define a perimeter.
Grandifloras grow up to six feet tall and produce classic tea rose flowers.
They make a stunning centerpiece to a formal bed or are striking alone
as accent roses.
Miniature or Sweetheart Roses are fragrant shrub roses with compact
stems and petite, continuously blooming flowers. They’re ideal
in containers near doors and windows.
Groundcover Roses grow close to the ground, bearing flowers along the
stems. They spread quickly, blanketing an area in a gorgeous carpet of
flowers.
Climbersand Ramblers are vigorous roses, with long, arching canes that
can be trained to grow vertically, up a wall, trellis or across a structure
to hide an unsightly view.
Tree roses have a tall trunk with a rose bush grafted
on top. They
look lovely lining a path or flanking a bench. Planted in pots, they
can dress up a patio or balcony.
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