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Landscaping
With Roses
Paul F. Zimmerman
This article has appeared in
various forms in
The American Rose Society
2000 Annual
Perennial Magazine - 2003
And a few others.
A man walks into a nursery and asks, “I’m looking for a
flowering shrub that comes in a lot of different colors
and sizes, is fragrant, blooms all year that I can mix
with a bunch of other plants. Got any suggestions?”
The Nursery Person puts a finger to His/Her lips and
quietly motions for the man to follow
Him/Her. He/She leads the man by the azaleas, around
the camellias and down past the viburnums. Turning the
corner He/She points to a huge section of flowering
shrubs in all shapes and sizes with an overwhelming
fragrance. The man takes one look, turns to the Nursery
Person and says, “but these are roses”. The Nursery
Person says, “I know, they make great landscape shrubs.
But don’t tell anyone because you’ll make rosarians
really mad.”
A bit extreme perhaps but it illustrates my point that
most of us consider roses to be nothing more than a
flower factory. Too many of us go out, buy a bunch of
rosebushes and pay no attention to how and where we
plant them. Then as long as they do not get disease and
the flowers keep coming, we are happy. What we end up
with is a row of little soldiers all proudly wearing
epaulets on their shoulders but unfortunately the
overall look sometimes leaves much to be desired.
Perhaps you’ve seen a bed of roses with the odd
Floribunda and
Grandiflora
thrown in making the rose garden look like an out of
balance skyline. Roses are great shrubs and should take
their place proudly in the garden with the other
plants. After all, how many other shrubs are there that
give color all year around? Well, there is the hibiscus
but for those of us who live in the 48 states that
cannot grow them we will stick to roses. So try
not to think of your rose bushes as a separate entity
from the rest of the garden.
So where do we begin? First, I am going to
break the roses down by growth habit. This way you can
pick a rose by where you need it in the garden. Not
unlike the method used by many gardening books in
selecting perennials.
The types of growth habit I use are upright,
sprawling, and climbing. Upright bush's growth habit
goes straight up and the blooms tend to be on top of the
canes. Ala a lot of the Portlands. Sprawling are the
bushes where the canes go out away from the center and
bend over to the ground. They bear flowers all along
the cane. Most Bourbons fit into this category.
Climbers scramble along fences, walls and trellis. I
then subdivided these categories by height: small,
medium and large. A quick breakdown of the major
classes of Roses by growth habit and size goes like
this.
|
|
Upright |
Sprawling |
|
Ground Cover |
|
Ground Cover |
|
Small Shrub
(3- 4’. Front of the Border) |
Miniature
China
Tea
Polyantha |
|
|
Medium Shrub
(4’-6’. Middle of the
Border) |
Floribunda
Portland
Some English
Centifolia
Damask |
Hybrid Rugosa |
|
Large Shrub
(6’ plus. Back of the
Border) |
Grandiflora
Hybrid Perpetual
Some English
Grandiflora
Hybrid Gallica
Moss
Alba |
Some English
Bourbon
Hybrid Eglanteria
Hybrid Musk |
|
Small Climber
(6’-8’. 4’ fences and short
pillars like mailbox posts) |
|
Climbing Miniatures
Climbing China
Climbing Polyantha |
|
Medium Climber
(6’-12’. Arbors, 8’ pillars
and 6’ fences) |
|
Sprawling Bourbon
Sprawling English
Climbing Floribunda
Some Hybrid Musk |
|
Large Climber
(12’-20’. Pergolas, long
runs of fence) |
|
Large Flowered Climbers
Noisettes
Climbing Teas
Climbing Bourbons |
|
Rambler
(20’ plus. Trees, large
fences, banks & hillsides) |
|
Hybrid Banksia
Hybrid Bracteata
Hybrid Gigantea
Hybrid Multiflora
Hybrid Wichurana |
|
Hedging |
Floribunda
Grandiflora
Hybrid Perpetual
Polyantha
Portland
Alba
Hybrid Gallica |
|
|
Pots |
Miniatures
Floribundas
China
Tea
Polyantha
Some English |
|
You may notice the “Shrub” class is missing
from the chart. Unfortunately, this class is a catchall
class for all kinds of different roses. There are
shrubs that fit every occasion but you need to evaluate
them individually. All rose catalogues and websites
have information on sizes of the individual shrubs so
let that be your guide.
Okay, now that we know how the roses are
going to grow we need to figure out where to plant
them. To make this easier I would like you to think of
roses a little differently. Instead of thinking of them
as roses, think of them as just another flowering
shrub. That is right, just like a forsythia, a
hydrangea, an azalea etc. these roses are used the same
way in your garden.
Roses need sun, so that is the first
consideration we will take into account. What is full
sun for a rose? Not as much as you think. Full sun is
a minimum of 7 hours a day as long as it is morning
sun. If they can get sun all day that is better, but at
least 7 hours of morning sun is enough. I do not advise
you plant roses in an area that does not get sun until
the afternoon. The only class of roses that can take
less sun or dappled light are the Hybrid Musks. Here is
a little planting tip when trying to put a rose into
dappled light. Do not take it out of the pot. Just dig
a hole the size of the pot, stick the pot with the rose
in the ground and watch it. You will know within six
weeks or so if the rose is happy, because the leaves
will still be healthy and will continue to bloom. If it
is not happy, simply slip the pot out of the ground and
try it somewhere else.
Roses do not like wet feet so make sure the
place you plant them has decent drainage. This brings
us to water needs. Roses like infrequent deep watering,
which means when you water, water deeply and then let
them dry out a little before the next watering.
Obviously, rainfall has its own agenda, but figure that
¼” of rain is the same as a good watering. Anything
less does not count.
A myth I would like to debunk here is the
one about getting the leaves wet. Hogwash! What are
you going to do when it rains – run out there with
umbrellas? Overhead watering is fine and in fact, we do
it all the time here at the nursery. It is a great way
to keep fungus down by washing off the spores. It is
when you overhead water that matters. Do it in the
morning, not in the evening. That way the leaves can
dry off before fungus kicks in.
Once you have locations picked out that
fulfill these two requirements let your imagination run
wild. The easiest possibility is in the border with
your other shrubs and perennials. Roses enhance any
part of a classic English flower border.
But how
about growing roses on pillars? This is a great way to
add either vertical interest to the garden and/or to
grow some of the climbers in a small space. A pillar
rose is nothing more than a rose grown on some kind of
vertical support like a wooden 4”x4”, a wrought iron
structure or bamboo poles – the list goes on. Simply
plant the rose at the base of the pillar, wrap the canes
barber pole style around it and when the rose gets to
the top, simply let it fountain off.
Roses
make great security fences. All the ramblers, if grown
unsupported will slowly mound up into a very thick and
in the case of the thorny ones, a very vicious barrier
to anything you do not want in your yard.
The ramblers are also great for covering
long stretches of fences. I like to layer them in with
repeat blooming climbers. All the ramblers have great
foliage so by layering them and repeating climbers
together you get a great spring display when all of them
bloom, and then the repeaters continue to bloom through
the fall against the luscious foliage of the ramblers.
For an extra kick, grow autumn blooming clematis in
there.
Have a hillside you are tired of mowing or
keeping down with the weed eater. Think roses.
Ramblers like the Lady Banks Roses will root all along
the canes and hold most any hillside. Pop in some big
rose shrubs for color and you will not need to bother
with the hillside again.
For other places to grow roses think hedges,
tumbling over rock walls, edging along a walkway, mass
planting at the foot of the driveway – the list is
limited only by your imagination. However, what I hope
you are beginning to understand is roses are a lot more
versatile than you think.
Once the rose is planted and growing, it
will not mind a little care, but not as much as rose
books would have you think. First, let us talk about
pruning. These kinds of roses do not like being pruned
hard so do not do it. At most, you can shape them by
taking off no more than 1/3rd of the mature
size of the plant. Feel free to do this during any part
of the season, but right after they have a bloom flush
is the best. In the case of climbers, shaping is a
little different.
Climbers on arbors, walls and fences can get
messy in that they send out long shoots off the main
branches that grow in complete disorder. The key to
keeping climbers tidy is knowing what you can and cannot
cut. First, do not cut the main canes. These are the
long canes coming from the base of the plant. You can
tip them back using the no more than 1/3rd
rule, but that is it. However, the laterals are a
different story. These are the “branches” coming off
the main cane and you can cut them back to within 12” of
the main cane at most anytime – best is again right
after they bloom. Simply follow this rule and your
climbers will remain tidy.
All plants like feeding and roses are no
exception. However, start by feeding the soil - and not
with chemicals. Feed it with organics. Composted horse
manure, mushroom compost, and your own compost – all
these work to build a healthy soil. In addition, make
sure you add compost yearly – not just when you plant.
Think of a forest floor. Every year the leaves fall and
turn to compost. Mother Nature does not come through
with a giant leaf blower and clean up every fall. No,
she knows the best thing is to keep rejuvenating the
soil on a yearly basis. You need to do the same.
As to feeding during the year, keep it
simple. I find the following works great for any home
garden. In spring when the new growth is about 1” long,
scatter ½ cup each of Epson salts and a long-term
fertilizer (like Osmocote) around each bush. Put your
compost on and, if you wish a decorative
mulch on top. That is it! Come late summer, when the
roses are starting to push towards their fall bloom you
can add some short-term plant food for the fall push.
Do not use long-term fertilizer in the fall. The last
thing you want to do is pump the roses full of nitrogen
while they are trying to go dormant. If you want to do
some liquid feeding during the year, by all means do,
but with this feeding method you will not have to.
Lastly, let us talk fungus and bugs. The
thing to remember about these vigorous landscape roses
is regardless of how much fungus they get, or how bad
the Japanese Beetles get them, they are hearty enough to
grow out of it. So, if you want to spray you can, but
if you are out of town or do not have time do not worry
about it. However, any kind of treatment starts with
healthy plants. Just like people, a healthy plant has a
better chance of fighting off disease so keep that soil
healthy.
In the case of fungus, you treat them
differently depending on if you want to prevent it, or
you already have it. The former you treat with
preventatives, the latter with eradicants.
Preventatives are almost all chemical based and
systemic. That is, they are absorbed into the plant.
Check with your local garden center as to what is
available in your area and what they feel works best.
If you have fungus and you want to get rid
of it then you need an eradicant. Most chemical ones
are pretty lethal and I do not advise them for the home
gardener. There are natural choices that work and we
recommend going this route.
First
is baking soda. Baking soda does a good job of killing
disease spores once they land on your roses. The
mixture is simple. 1 tbs per gallon of water of each of
the following; Baking Soda, Canola Oil, Insecticidal
Soap and White Vinegar. Be careful when you mix it,
because it sometimes foams up, but once you get them all
dissolved together simply spray it on your roses using
whatever spray applicator you normally use.
Secondly is using a product known as dormant
lime and sulfur. It comes as a liquid concentrate and
it is how you use it that counts. Mix at the rate of
1tbs per gallon of water. Spray on your roses (it will
not hurt other plants) either early in the morning
before the sun is way up or on a cloudy day (you want to
avoid sunburn). Wait about 30 minutes and then wash it
all off with water. Sulfur is a great eradicant for any
kind of fungus. I have used it for years with great
success.
In addition, the “Safer” company offers a
great line of natural insecticidal soaps and
fungicides. They all work well and we recommend them.
For bugs all the insecticidal soaps work
well as does simply blasting them off with water. There
is another product out there called Neem Oil that is
working well in all kinds of trials. A good Garden
Center will have it or it is available mail order from
companies like Gardens Alive (www.gardensalive.com).
Always remember to follow the instructions and never
apply more than the recommended dosage of any
insecticide or fungicide – natural or not.
I hope this encourages everyone who loves
gardening, but has stopped growing or has never grown
roses, to try them. These shrub roses are easy to care
for, they give great bloom, come in all shapes and
colors and best of all have wonderful fragrance (well,
most of them). What more can you ask for from a plant.
Paul F.
Zimmerman
Ashdown
Roses Ltd
November
7, 2003 |