KAREN WIGHT -- No place like home
Roses fall into a special category of garden delights.
True, they require some maintenance, but this terrestrial investment
lives for decades, produces great beauty and fragrance for your home most
of the year and comes in an overwhelming number of varieties and colors.
Now that the last of the Christmas blooms have faded, January is the time
to give your roses full attention. An annual pruning is necessary to give
your roses the opportunity for new growth to occur.
Most blooms on a rose bush come from the new growth generated by a winter
make-over, so it is important to trim out the dead, unproductive wood.
Cut out branches that cross through the middle of the bush, decreasing
air circulation. And eliminate branches that make the bush appear
lopsided.
Since we enjoy a relatively temperate climate, hybrid tea roses in our
area don’t need severe pruning. Removing one third of the previous
season’s growth is sufficient to keep your rose bush happily producing
until next year.
Try not to cut into the main canes. These are the prime source of energy
and a drastic pruning can weaken the plant. The ideal result is a
‘v’-shaped bush with an open center.
Shrub roses, floribundas, such as icebergs, need less maintenance. This
type of rose produces more canes than a tea rose. Part of the charm of
floribundas is the foliage and size of the spread. Prune these plants
only by a quarter, and most of that should come from unproductive wood
and branches that cross through the center of the bush. If you are
growing these plants as a hedge, be sure you trim them uniformly.
Climbing roses are easier still. They should be left alone for the first
two to three years after planting, pruning out dead wood only. After they
are well established, prune out unproductive growth, vertical canes that
are unruly and lateral canes that are flimsy and an eyesore.
Climbing roses produce flowers on lateral branches, so be sure to provide
enough support for the weight of the branch when it is heavy with blooms.
Sometimes a rose bush will develop suckers. These renegade branches
usually come from below the bud union or sprout up in the ground near the
bush. They grow rapidly and usually have a different leaf structure. They
will not produce flowers but they will drain energy from your plant. Take
these out so your rose can concentrate on what it does best: produce
beautiful, fragrant flowers.
As new growth appears in February, give your roses their first
fertilizing of the year. Roses love to be fed after a bloom cycle and
this will ensure another crop in about six weeks. When your rose starts
to bloom and you want to enjoy them indoors, cut enough of the stem to
reach a set of five leaflets. This will stimulate the plants to produce
another bud and keep the growth process cycling.
The quantity, class and varieties of roses that have become available in
the past few years makes choosing a rose a complicated process.
There are the hybrid tea roses that most of us think of as the
traditional rose bush. This is the most popular class of rose and has an
all-star lineup of choices, such as Peace, Double Delight, and Tropicana.
Floribundas are shrublike hedge roses that produce multiple cluster-like
flowers. A single flowering stem of a floribunda rose makes an instant
bouquet. The plants are vigorous and are an excellent source of color in
a garden. Roses in this class include Iceberg, Simplicity and French
Lace.
Grandiflora roses are similar to hybrid teas, but reach eight to 10 feet
in height. These are the giants of the rose world and include varieties
such as Queen Elizabeth, Love and White Lightenin’.
Old-fashioned roses have bloodlines that date back hundreds of years.
They have a special charm about them, as if they know they have stood the
test of time and survived with all of their glory intact.
We hear about these roses in literature, see them on ancient pottery and
have sayings like “never the rose without the thorn,” which are
testaments to their well-deserved adoration and longevity.
With names such as Damask Rose, La Reine Victoria and Baronne Prevost, it
is hard to diminish the importance of their ancestry.
Nobility and peasantry have enjoyed the rose’s beauty, fragrance and
tenacity for hundreds of years. And even though “a rose by any other name
would smell as sweet,” why tamper with perfection?
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs Saturdays.
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