Two roses
selected as
winners for 2002
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension Center
As the
New Year arrives, it is fun to see what new plants are being
touted for spring. Rose lovers for sure are interested in
the new All-America Rose Selections.
|

|
|
Love
& Peace (above) exhibits the classic hybrid tea
form and shows a family resemblance to its parent,
Peace, the most honored rose of all time. (Below)
Starry Night's pristine white blossoms are
reminiscent of the dogwood, and yet they will
provide bouquets all season long.
|
|

|
Two roses
captured All-America Selection honors for 2002, Love &
Peace and Starry Night.
Love
& Peace will mesmerize the rose grower or garden
enthusiast with both its fruity scent and appearance.
This is
probably what you would expect from a rose whose parent is
Peace, the most honored rose of all time. Love & Peace
has a high center, spiral-formed blooms that open to reveal
5-inch, breathtaking flowers of golden-yellow edged with
pink. I have always been a sucker for bicolored roses, and
this one looks very appealing.
Each
fragrant blossom has a minimum petal count of 40 surrounded
by the wonderful dark-green, glossy foliage. This is a
classic hybrid tea growing 4 to 5 feet tall and 3 feet wide.
It does show some disease tolerance that is a rare trait for
hybrid teas.
Love
& Peace is perfect for the more formal rose garden or
for just creating a striking feature within the landscape.
You won't be able to resist bringing cut roses inside to add
a tantalizing fragrance to any room.
Ping
Lim and Jerry Twomey hybridized Love & Peace with a
combination of Peace and an unknown seedling. When I was
executive director of the American Rose Society, I was
enamored by other Twomey roses like All That Jazz and Sheer
Elegance that also received All-America rose
designations.
The
second 2002 All-America Selection among roses is Starry
Night. This may be the rose most gardeners will find
exciting. Starry Night takes top honors with its large
clusters of pure white flowers. What makes Starry Night
extra special is that it is a shrub-type rose.
Starry
Night has medium-green, glossy foliage enhancing the
five-petal flower that measures 2 _ to 3 inches in diameter.
It grows 3 feet tall and 3 feet wide in cool climates but
will reach 6 feet by 6 feet here in the South.
Starry
Night is a spreading shrub rose showing good disease
resistance. It is perfect for large plantings, borders or
ground cover. Its pure white sparkling flowers are
reminiscent of the dogwood, and sure to live up to its name
by providing you with a constellation of blooms throughout
the season.
Starry
Night was hybridized by Pierre Orard of France with a
combination of Anisley Dickson (a floribunda from 1984) and
a species rose (Rosa wichuraiana) that is native to Japan
and China, and now naturalized in the United
States.
For a
cottage garden look, try Starry Night with the old fashioned
larkspur, salvias, purple coneflowers or even the new
angelonias.
Choose
a site in full sun to grow Love & Peace or Starry Night.
Before planting, build the bed up by incorporating four to
six inches of organic matter and tilling to a depth of eight
to 10 inches. Bed preparation is the key to happiness in
growing roses.
Since
these are budded roses, you will want to plant them where
the bud union is about one inch above the soil profile.
Since these roses do get large, space them at a minimum of
36 to 42 inches apart. By all means, add a layer of mulch
after planting.
Rose
growing is fun and Love & Peace and Starry Night, the
new All-America Selections for 2002, are two you will want
to try. Shop for them at your local garden center in early
spring.
-30-
Released:
Dec. 24, 2001
Contact: Norman Winter
(601)
857-2284 Editor's Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns are within one month of their release. Editors should examine older columns carefully for any information that could be time sensitive.
Publications
may download photos at 200 dpi:
Love
and Peace
Starry
Night
|