With
their great beauty, tremendous variety, and luscious scent, it's easy
to become passionate about roses. For many, roses are the symbol of
a well-cared-for home, evoking images of that picket-fenced cottage
awash with rambling roses.
If you are new to
growing roses, you may have noticed there are numerous classes of roses,
and there are many varieties in each class. What's the difference, and
how should you decide what to plant? Hybrid tea? Floribunda? Before
you go rose shopping, it's helpful to understand a little about the
different rose classifications, and how they are each used in the landscape.
Don't be surprised, however, if you make up your mind to grow floribundas...until
you fall in love with the perfect hybrid tea!
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Hybrid
tea roses. These are tall, long-stemmed roses ideal for cutting--they're
the Valentine's Day roses you see at the florist. The flowers
are usually borne singly, one to a stem, rather than in clusters.
In the garden they are often featured as single specimens or in
a traditional rose cutting garden.
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American
Hero Hybrid Tea Rose
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Electron
Hybrid Tea Rose
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John
F Kennedy
Hybrid Tea Rose
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Joyfulness
Hybrid Tea Rose
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| Floribundas.
Developed during the last century, these roses have the large,
showy blossoms of the hybrid teas, but bloom more freely, setting
clusters of blossoms rather than a single bloom on a stem. Floribundas
are versatile; an individual shrub will fit easily into almost
any sunny border planting. However, they are perhaps most striking
in mass plantings.
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Leila
Verde Floribunda Rose
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Octavia
Hill Floribunda Rose
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Nicole
Floribunda Rose
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Geranium
Red Floribunda Rose
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| Shrub roses.
These
roses have changed the way many people view roses. Shrub roses,
especially when compared with traditional varieties, are impressive
for many reasons: their natural disease-resistance, their willingness
to grow in a variety of climates with a minimum of attention from
the gardener, their compact growth habit (very little pruning
required), not to mention the great beauty of their flowers, which
are borne consistently over a very long season.
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Champlain
Shrub Rose
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Monticello
Shrub Rose
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Niagara
Shrub Rose
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Alchymist
Shrub Rose
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Ground
Cover roses. These low growing roses casacade over walls or
act as ground covers in a perennial garden. Most grow only 1 to
2 feet tall while spreading 3 to 4 feet wide. They look great
at the edge of beds and in containers.
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tree
roses
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Central
Park Ground Cover Rose
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Madison
Ground Cover Rose
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| Climbers.
Climbing roses produce long canes that can be trained to a
trellis, fence, or other support. Grow them up and over an arching
trellis to make a striking entryway; train them up a lattice to
adorn a plain wall.
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Compassion
Climbing Rose
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Lavender
Lassie
Climbing Rose
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Royal
Sunset Climbing Rose
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Altissimo
Climbing Rose
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