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Pictures Of Rose Gardens

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Rose gardens provide beauty and color to your outdoor areas. Fans of roses spend a great deal of time growing the perfect roses, but rose gardens do not have to take all your time and energy to be gorgeous. With the range of roses available you can find some that grow under challenging circumstances and bloom almost continually from late spring to fall.



Use natural pesticides and insecticides in your rose garden or purchase commercially available products and use exactly as directed. Rose gardens can be susceptible to fungus so you may also need fungicide. With these tools, almost anyone can be successful as a grower of fantastically beautiful roses.

The Number One rule in creating a great rose garden is to start with good stock. When you choose rose plants, select two year old field grown plants that are already budding. These plants, if not pruned, should have three or more canes of 18 inches or so. If you purchase pruned rose plants, the canes should be about one-quarter inch in diameter at the top. If possible, purchase plants potted in paper pots so they can be transplanted easily at most any time of year.

When planting your rose garden, select a location that provides good drainage and has lots of sun. Trim any broken or bruised roots from the stock and cut the top growth to about eight inches. Create a hole that is at least six inches deeper than needed for the roots. This allows the roots lots of space without crowding or bending them. Place a fistful of small rocks in the bottom of the hole to help with drainage. Mix one tablespoon of rose fertilizer with the soil placed over the drainage pebbles. Then add soil until the level desired for planting the rose plant is reached. Set the plant into the ground, spreading the roots out and then fill the hole with soil. Pack the soil firmly two or three times as you fill the hole.

If you plant hybrid tea roses, polyantha or floribunda types in your rose garden, the first feeding should be in early spring as the leaf buds begin to swell. Clear any mulch away and work plant food that is especially formulated for roses into the dirt around the plant. Use about 1 tablespoon per plant and do not over feed. The next feeding should be at the same rate and should occur after the first heavy rose bloom. The third feeding, again at the same amount, must be done in late summer. Perform the third feeding no later than mid-August. In the south where the blooming season can last until October or even November, you can add a fourth feeding during early October. Some rose gardeners feed monthly and have good results. You can experiment to learn which method works best for you.

When feeding tea roses in your garden, use half the amounts recommended for hybrid tea roses. Apply in the same manner and on the same schedule; simply reduce the quantity of rose food applied. With hybrid perpetual, climbing and shrub roses, feed one tablespoon of rose food for each square foot of space around the rose bush in the early spring and again when blooms appear.

Your rose garden may require watering during the summer months. If the soil is well drained, there is little danger of over-watering. Soak the soil so that it becomes damp at least six inches deep. Don't just sprinkle the rose plants. Keep the soil in your rose garden loose and aerated and remove any weeds that invade. Mulching your garden will help prevent weed growth and keep the moisture in the soil around your roses.

Rose gardens are susceptible to black-spot, mildew and blight. Insects such as thrips and red spider mites can cause problems. Control of the insects can be accomplished by use of insecticides or natural insect deterrents. Chemical dust that can control fungus diseases as well as most insects can be applied every week to ten days if you prefer this method of control.

Rose gardens containing bush roses must be pruned in the early spring when the leaves begin to bud but before growth starts. You must remove all wood that was killed or injured during the winter months. Cut back to solid, healthy tissue and remove any weak or twiggy growth. You can shape the roses in your garden to create plants of a uniform height or shape them as desired but remove as little healthy woody growth as possible. Old canes can be pruned back to ground level when necessary. Hybrid roses can be pruned back to 18 to 24 inches while rambling roses should be pruned after blooming by removing unwanted canes at the base of the cane.

Protect your rose garden in winder so that the frost does not kill the plants. Mulching with straw, peat moss or other material is necessary in all but the southern-most climates. This allows the soil temperature to remain above freezing and prevents the plant from repeated freezing and thawing which can kill or seriously damage the roots of the rose plant. To mulch properly, pile soil around the base of each plant to a height of about six inches just after the first light frost. Apply a thick layer of mulch when the first frost is expected or not later than immediately after the first frost.

Growing rose gardens can be satisfying. You'll be proud of your beautiful blooms and gorgeous colors. Roses are available in a rainbow of colors and varieties, so enjoy planting and tending a rose garden in your landscape.
Pictures Of Rose Gardens
There are two main classes of roses: Bush roses and climbing roses. These two classifications are based entirely on tendencies of growth. Bush roses grow from 1 foot to 6 feet in height and require no support. Climbing roses produce long canes each year and must be provided with some type of support. Bush Roses Bush roses include many types grouped according to flowering habit, winter hardiness, and other traits. These types are hybrid teas, floribundas. polyanthas, hybrid perpetuals, shrubs, old-fashioned, tree or standard, and miniature.

Hybrid Teas: Hybrid teas are more widely grown and more popular than all other types of roses combined. They are the so-called monthly or everblooming roses, and are the ones grown in beds in rose gardens and by florists under glass. In fact, when the word "rose" is used, it generally suggests a hybrid tea variety. Most hybrid teas are winterhardy in the milder sections of the country, but varieties differ in cold resistance. In sections where winters are severe, practically all varieties need some protection.

Floribundas: Floribunda roses bear their flowers in clusters, and the individual blooms of many closely resemble hybrid teas. They are increasing in popularity, especially for bed plantings where large numbers of flowers are wanted. As a rule floribunda varieties are hardy: they will tolerate more neglect than any other type of rose with the possible exception of some of the shrub species. While some are fine for cutting, they will not replace hybrid teas for this purpose.

Polyanthas: Polyantha roses are distinguished from the floribundas by their smaller flowers, which are borne in large clusters. They are closely related to many of the climbing roses, having flower clusters very similar to them in form and size of individual florets. The polyanthas are hardy and may be grown in many sections where hybrid teas are difficult to grow. Their chief use is in bed plantings or in borders with other perennials. They are excellent for mass plantings.

Hybrid Perpetuals: Hybrid perpetuals are the June roses of grandmother's garden. Their flowers are large. Generally they lack the refinement of hybrid teas. As their name indicates, they are considered as ever-blooming types, although most of them do not bear continuously through the growing season as do hybrid teas. They usually develop large, vigorous bushes if given good cultural care and proper pruning. They are very hardy and stand low winter temperatures without protection.

Shrub Roses: Shrub roses are actually a miscellaneous group of wild species, hybrids, and varieties that develop an open bush type of growth that is useful in general landscape work. They are hardy in all sections of the country. While their flowers do not equal in size or form those of other types of roses, many bear very attractive seed pods in the fall. They have very fine foliage and some are quite useful for hedges or screen plantings.
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About Author
Both Trond & Elizabeth Passage are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Trond has sinced written about articles on various topics from Digital Photography, Forex Guide and Digital Photography. About the author:Trond Kristiansen is a Computer Engineer and living in Norway. On spare time he is working at his home garden in Norway. For more infomation go to:
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