A few of my favorites rose varieties are: When you buy roses, you are either purchasing them as bare roots or plants that have grown out. It’s easy to tell the difference, because bare root ...
Courage and few sharp tools are all you need to prune roses: a by-pass hand pruner, by-pass lopper, a small saw, gloves, Elmer’s Glue-All and perhaps hedge clippers. Some fearless gardeners prune ...
Breeding work has created varieties suitable a wide range of uses ... less than potted roses and are grown without using peat. Plant bare-root roses between November and March. Plants in containers ...
February pruning sets the stage for a healthy, vigorous rose garden that will reward you with abundant blooms in the months ...