For Thousands
of Years...
Flower
growers depend
on roses
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
In 600
B.C., the Greek poetess, Sappho, described the rose as the
Queen of Flowers, and it became our National Floral Emblem
in 1987. It is safe to say roses are much loved and are here
to stay.
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Rio
Samba (top) -- All America Rose Selections winner
Rio Samba's reddish-orange and yellow blend offers
outstanding beauty for this year's rose gardens.
Look
Alikes (left) -- One of this year's All America
Rose Selections winners, Love & Peace, is a
dead-ringer for a past winner, Rio Samba. Both are
reddish-orange and yellow blends offering
outstanding beauty for this year's rose
gardens.
Garden
Beauty (right) -- A favorite floribunda, Playboy,
is mostly orange with a splash of
yellow.
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The
American Rose Society lists 56 official classes of roses, so
you know there must be some you can enjoyably grow and
beautify your landscape with as well as provide fragrant and
colorful bouquets for indoor displays.
Some
people disparage the hybrid tea roses because of the effort
required to grow them, but most of the best things in life
take work. Many people consider the "work" to be very
enjoyable or even therapy after stressful days at an office.
Most gardeners consider growing hybrid tea roses to be fun,
or they wouldn't be the most popular roses in
America.
More
than 225,000 visitors annually, go to the Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Museum in Jackson and stroll the
rose garden, shooting pictures, putting their noses in the
flowers and taking notes. One visit and the rose display
will hook most gardeners on the idea of growing their
own.
The
University of Southern Mississippi in Hattiesburg is known
far and wide for its beautiful hybrid tea rose gardens.
Popular demand has prompted USM to organize a Rose Gala on
May 5 with speakers and an afternoon of fun amongst the
roses. For more information contact Pat McDonald at (601)
266-6951.
If you
want to start growing your own roses, consider first that
the rose is one of those plants that does not like wet feet.
Not many of our choice plants do. A raised bed like we use
for vegetables or azaleas, rich in organic matter, will do
just fine.
Black
spot is the villain that causes the most angst in growing
roses. Much can be done to strengthen the fight against
black spot and lessen the amount of fungicide applications.
Plant your roses in full sun and for sure full morning sun.
This will allow dew on the leaves to dry.
Space
plants where they will have good air circulation for this
drying process. When you water, use soaker hoses, home drip
systems or at least water from the bottom with a wand.
Keeping water off the foliage really increases your chances
of being a happy rose grower.
Leaves
that are still expanding (new growth) are most susceptible
to black spot. The disease spore must be immersed in water
for at least seven hours for any infection to occur.
Symptoms will appear in three to 16 days depending on
temperature and inoculum. Keeping this in mind and being
familiar with a couple of garden center fungicides makes it
fairly simple to grow roses.
The
real hard part may be deciding which hybrid tea roses to
grow. Most garden centers are loaded with huge selections of
high quality roses. I have always been partial to roses with
blended colors of orange, yellow and red. I still ooh and
ahh every time I see Perfect Moment, a past All America Rose
Selections winner.
Rio
Samba, which is also an AARS winner, is another favorite of
mine with reddish-orange and yellow. This year's AARS
winner, Love & Peace, is breathtakingly beautiful in
these same colors.
I also
still love Double Delight, the last rose to win the
fragrance award in the American Rose Society. Everyone loves
the deep-red and creamy-white combination.
Without
a doubt, gardeners still love red roses. There are a lot of
good choices in the red, but I love it when the old timer
Mister Lincoln sneaks up and wins the grand prize at a show.
Mister Lincoln is one of the largest hybrid teas and has a
fragrance that will bring you to your knees. Other great red
hybrid teas are Olympiad, Ingrid Bergman and Opening Night,
all of which are AARS winners.
If
yellow is your favorite color, you may want to consider
Midas Touch, an AARS winner that is a deep saturated yellow.
St. Patrick has received rave reviews with its golden-yellow
tinged with green. Other great yellow roses are Gold Medal,
a grandiflora; Sunsprite and Sun Flare, very easy-to-grow
floribundas; and Golden Showers, a climbing rose.
Some of
my other favorite hybrid teas that are easy to find and
among the most beautiful are Pristine, which is ivory and
pink; Peace, the most honored rose of all time; and First
Prize, an enormous, deep-pink blossom rose with great
fragrance.
A few
of my favorite floribundas are Bill Warriner (salmon coral),
Sexy Rexy (pink), Love Potion (deep lavender with
fragrance), Playboy (mostly orange with a splash of yellow)
and Angel Face (deep mauve-lavender blossom that is very
fragrant).
Lastly,
don't forget about my favorite group, the David Austin
English Roses. These are vigorous, fragrant and a delight to
grow.
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Released:
April 1, 2002
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 d.p.i.:
Rio
Samba
| Love
& Peace
| Playboy
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