Daily Express

Roses are red...

Romantic roses are a beautiful addition to any garden – but if you want to enjoy them, you need to start planting now

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Red roses are a garden essential for the romantic at heart. And while you’ll never have them ready to cut for Valentine’s Day – they are way out of season in February, hence the huge price tag for shop-bought bouquets – now’s the perfect time to plant them.

Red roses come in all shades, from light scarlet to nearly black – and most of them are good for cutting.

The roses you buy as cut flowers in florists are the one-flower-perstem hybrid tea type.

However, at home you can also grow multi-headed floribunda­s and climbers, as well as David Austin’s delightful English roses, which combine the charm of old-fashioned roses with the free-flowering habits of modern varieties.

There are plenty of red roses to choose from, so if you are thinking of planting some go for varieties with natural disease resistance and a good strong scent. Some of the very best hybrid teas include “Alec’s red” (cherry red), “Deep Secret” (one of the very darkest), “Royal William” (crimson and long stemmed, good for cutting) and “Velvet Fragrance” (deep crimson with velvety petals).

For a climber, choose “Guinee”, deep red-black and semi frilly, or the climbing form of “Etoile de Hollande” (deep crimson with a very strong fragrance and, unlike many climbers, it will flower twice per summer). For red new English roses look for “Darcey Bussell” (petite rich crimson rosette-shaped flowers and very healthy plants) and “LD Braithwait­e” (brilliant scarlet, deep and double old roseshaped flowers). All roses enjoy a fairly open situation in full sun with deep and fertile, slightly heavy soil – clay loam is their favourite.

Plant within the next six or so weeks for a great show this summer, once you’ve enriched the soil generously with well-rotted manure or compost.

Mulch round roses annually in March, then top up nutrients by applying rose feed in April and again just after each flush of flowers through the summer.

Regular deadheadin­g acts as summer pruning, but make sure you also prune hybrid teas and floribunda­s hard in mid-March, and tidy up the shapes of new English roses when they finish flowering at the end of summer.

 ??  ?? velveT FRAGRANCe eTOIle de HOllANde deep SeCReT dARCeY BUSSell
velveT FRAGRANCe eTOIle de HOllANde deep SeCReT dARCeY BUSSell

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