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Landscaping With Roses

Dress your yard with the classic beauty of roses. New types of roses trade fussy growing techniques for easy-does-it culture that makes it a snap to incorporate these floral favorites into landscape settings.

Uses for Roses

As you consider tucking roses into your yard, think of them as players in the garden chorus – not soloists. Use them to interject season-long color into a perennial bed, pairing them with colorful companion plantings. Roses can interject color into perennial beds when other plants aren't blooming. Arrange roses to create a blooming hedge, or train one on an arbor to stage a showy entrance.

Roses that sprawl can easily hide an air conditioning unit or pool pump; upright shrub roses can handily disguise an unattractive fence. Showcase smaller roses in containers, or mass several roses of the same type to create a colorful impact.

Types of Roses

Choosing the right rose depends on what task you want it to perform. Roses fall into different classifications, and certain groups lend themselves to landscape use: shrubs, floribundas, miniatures, climbers and ground covers.

Shrub Roses. Size varies from tight and compact to large and sprawling. A rose can also grow to different sizes in different regions. Check with local sources to confirm size. Use Shrub Roses like traditional woody shrubs. Good winter hardiness. Best uses: specimen plant, in planting beds with perennials, foundation planting, screen.

Floribunda Roses. An ever-blooming rose with clusters of flowers. Plants tend to have an upright form. Good winter hardiness. Best use: hedges, entry gardens, containers – anywhere you want constant color.

Miniature Roses. Traditional rose blossoms in smaller size on smaller plants. In the garden, plants can grow 2-3 feet tall. Need extra winter protection; in coldest zones, cover plants with loose mulch (straw, chopped leaves, etc.) after the ground freezes. Best uses: edging, containers, mixed in perennial beds.

Climbing Roses. Add charm to any setting. Plants require more work and knowledge for effective pruning. Canes must be tied onto supports. Plants flower most heavily when canes are trained horizontally. Best uses: train on a building, pergola, trellis, fence or arbor.

Ground-Cover Roses. Plants can be tidy and restrained, or aggressive and sprawling. Best uses: edging planting beds or foundation plantings, covering a slope, cascading over a wall.

Tips for Success


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