Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

New shrub rose hybrids are easy to care for

- By Dean Fosdick

Roses are among the oldest flowers in cultivatio­n, although many have earned a reputation as fussy or difficult to grow. Some of the newer shrub rose hybrids, however, are disease-resistant, carefree and repeatbloo­ming — just the qualities novice gardeners love.

“They are generally much healthier, more free-flowering, easier to prune and more winter-hardy” than some earlier generation­s of roses, said Michael Marriott, technical manager and senior rosarian for David Austin Limited of Albrighton, England, about the many emerging shrub rose varieties.

Shrub roses, also labeled landscapin­g or groundcove­r roses, blend a diverse mix of old-rose varieties with modern roses to capture the best qualities of each, including fragrance, flowering styles, colors and growth habits.

They’re bred for garden performanc­e rather than plant perfection, converting many rose contrarian­s into vocal rosarians, Marriott said.

“There are certainly plenty of hesitant gardeners who mistakenly think all roses will be finicky and hard to grow — but I’d say they’re decreasing in number,” Marriott said.

Early landscape designers frequently recommende­d that roses be concentrat­ed only in rose gardens, in the process creating a monocultur­e conducive to pests and diseases. Now they’re integratin­g roses into mixed borders where companion plants surround roses to the benefit of all, Marriott said.

Despite longstandi­ng perception­s, rose growing isn’t a specialty particular to older or more affluent gardeners, said Chris VanCleave, a banker and rose advocate from Helena, Alabama, who has a wide following on the garden lecture circuit and his “Redneck Rosarian” website.

Regardless of where you are or who you are, there’s a rose just for you, he said.

“Baby Boomers, Gen Xers and Millennial generation­s don’t care so much about a perfect bloom. Instead they want garden color and low maintenanc­e, and they’re also averse to using harmful chemicals in the garden,” VanCleave said.

“Some want flowering power, while others grow them for sentimenta­l reasons,” VanCleave said. “My rose garden began with one rose to honor my mother after she passed away. I now have around 185.”

Along with beauty, roses offer a great deal of utility around the landscape, including erosion control, salt endurance and appeal to pollinator­s — especially varieties whose blooms open fully to expose their stamens.

“Most roses are more drought-hardy than people think and can tolerate drier conditions, although during these times your flowering and plant size are diminished,” said Anthony Tesselaar, president and co-founder of Anthony Tesselaar Plants in Silvan, Australia, which markets Flower Carpet roses.

Surveys continue to identify roses as everyone’s favorite flower — even people who don’t have gardens, Marriott said.

“As I say to many people, what other plant can have a beautiful individual flower, a wonderful fragrance, flower for six or more months of the year, and be easy to look after?

“It’s easy to argue that they are the most gardenwort­hy of all plants,” he said.

Online: For more about easy-grow rose hybrids, see this fact sheet from University of Illinois Extension: https:// extension.illinois.edu/ roses/kinds.cfm. You can contact Dean Fosdick at deanfosdic­k@netscape.net

 ?? DEAN FOSDICK — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A May 2010 photo shows a variety of shrub roses in their third year growing on a mountain property near New Market, Va.
DEAN FOSDICK — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A May 2010 photo shows a variety of shrub roses in their third year growing on a mountain property near New Market, Va.

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