Save this article

Use this article for free on your own website

Republish this article for free on your own website or blog. Or search or browse for more articles that your audience will appreciate. Huge choice available. Ideal for finding quality, free content. Read our publishers guide.

Roses: All About Roses

Ask anyone who has a green thumb about rose gardening, and you may need a tape recorder to remember all the advice you'll get! Almost anyone who has an interest in gardening flowers and plants will eventually mosey into rose territory. It's almost irresistible because of the beauty and scent of one of the most popular plants on earth.

By Sandra T Stone

Ask anyone who has a green thumb about rose gardening, and you may need a tape recorder to remember all the advice you’ll get!  Almost anyone who has an interest in gardening flowers and plants will eventually mosey into rose territory.  It’s almost irresistible because of the beauty and scent of one of the most popular plants on earth.

A rose is like no other.  Rose gardening then will certainly open up grounds for controversy among fellow gardeners.  It’s a subject like that of rearing children.  To the rose gardening crowd, their plants often become like their own children.  They must be fed and nourished and guided properly to bloom and flourish into their majestic beauty. Gardeners have been known to talk to their plants to coax them into perfect health.

Rose gardening is sure to involve getting your hands dirty.  If you want to truly enjoy the experience, you must dig in with gusto and heartily embrace your adventure.  Well, there are gloves, you know; but the earth welcomes the hands-on experience.  Some say it is quite gratifying to become like one with the soil.

There is surely an art to rose gardening.  The experience can be as simple or as scientific as you so choose.  You may want to stock up on things like mulch, a shovel, a hoe, weed-killer, a watering can or hose, and maybe something called Miracle Grow or “food” for your rose plants.  Not to mention bandaids if your plants have thorns!  You’re certain to get pricked at some point if you have the type of rose plant that produces thorns.  It’s all part of the true rose gardening experience.

Do you want a rose plant already started in a pot?  You may have to repot it.  Make sure you do your homework before you buy one.

When you decide what type of rose plant you’d like, think of placement.  There is a plant called the thornless rose plant that will grow in the shade.  But most rose plants are known to have thorns, so you wouldn’t want your small child or grandchild or frequent tiny visitors to happen upon something that is so pretty that they can’t resist grabbing and end up with an unwelcome handful of thorns.  It may even sour them on the enjoyment of the rose plant for life because of a tearful memory.  And roses are too beautiful to allow such a thing!

There are climbing rose plants which you most certainly wouldn’t want trailing across the ground to be stomped by animals or other foot traffic.  Some roses are delicate and unfiltered light would cook their leaves to an unwelcome brown.  If your rose plant is the type that grows into a bush, you would want to place it in a spot that allows for it to spread.

Rose plants carry so many different names, it’s probably enough to fill a small book!  Some of the names include Rose Blaze, Rose Red Eden, Rose New Dawn, Rose Neptune, Rose Zephirine, just to name a very few.  If you want a rose that sounds like it belongs in a class all its own, you could buy a Rose Paris D’Yves St. Laurent!  That’s a mouthful!  Happy Hunting!

Related tags