ROSE NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

USA

THE FUTURE DOES NOT LOOK ROSY

PRINCESS OF WALES

Future generations may never know the beauty of Diana, Princess of Wales; sniff Catalina in the sunshine; or fall for Beloved.
For a century, devoted gardeners have appreciated the marvels of delicate and finicky hybrid roses and referred to them by name, like pets or family. The product of generations of breeding, the queen of flowers could act like a spoiled princess because its delicate blooms offered a special reward.
In recent years, though, time-strapped homeowners have traded their big teas for compact shrub roses—utilitarian soldiers in the landscape that could cover ground without fuss.
Our desire for the carefree—no-iron shirts, no-wax floors, and now low-maintenance yards—has brought the rose industry to a crossroads.
“At some point, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. (Landscape) roses will be all you have; the beautiful, unique hybrid teas will be gone,” said Charlie Anderson, president of Weeks Roses, the only major company still creating new varieties of full-size roses.
The flagging economy has compounded the rose industry’s troubles.
Two years ago, rose giant Jackson & Perkins, which had annually shipped 10 million bushes countrywide, filed for bankruptcy protection. Many of the hybrid roses the company created—such as Diana, Catalina and Beloved—may soon disappear from the mass market as the supply of those bushes dries up.
“Roses are viewed as an extravagance and they’re still trying to shed that stigma,” said Seth Taylor of Capital Nursery.
“People have a very specific thing in mind when they think of a rose—it’s full and lush and romantic. That’s your traditional rose, what people love,” Taylor said. “The single-petaled shrub roses are gaining a foothold with the public, but when my customers look at those flowers, they say ‘That’s not a rose.’ “
While gardeners may have visions of old-fashioned roses plucked from cottage gardens, their interest in growing them has waned, said Jolene Adams, incoming national president of the American Rose Society.
“Many homeowners have had some experience—usually in their mother’s or grandmother’s gardens—so they’ll try growing roses,” she said. “But without sufficient knowledge (on how to care for them), the roses languish and do not grow to their full, beautiful potential. And they’re not replaced if they die.”
Most of the United States’ rose bushes originate in California’s Central Valley. But unlike wheat or tomatoes, it takes several years to produce a single crop of rose bushes.
Hybridizers typically will test 400,000 seedlings to find one or two new varieties. Once selected, a new hybrid will be developed for seven to 10 years before it’s released into the market. When ready for sale, field-grown bushes are 2 years old.
Winter is prime rose-planting time. Valentine’s Day also spurs sales. But this month, local gardeners are finding limited selections at nurseries and home centers.
“I observed dramatically fewer roses in the nurseries this year,” said T.J. David, co-founder of the World Peace Rose Garden in Sacramento’s Capitol Park.
“The financial ills of the rose growers will cause a slowdown in the number of new varieties of roses that are available for sale,” he said. “Since growers make plans years in advance, it may take a year or two to see the full impact.”
The annual wholesale value of California’s rose crop dropped 55 percent from a high of $61.05 million in 2003 to $27.20 million in 2010, according to nursery industry expert Hoy Carman, a retired University of California-Davis professor.
“The whole nursery industry is down,” Carman said. “In 2008, sales just plummeted.”
Said Adams of the Rose Society: “Roses are not the first thing homeowners think of when they want to plant a garden. Competition with other choice plants is fierce. … The industry is going to have to change—and supply roses that the customers can use in the landscape.”
Most major rose growers have gone bankrupt or consolidated with other wholesale nurseries.
Weeks Roses, in Wasco near Bakersfield, Calif., survived its bankruptcy and is now owned by Indiana-based Gardens Alive. On 1,000 leased acres, Weeks will harvest about 3 million bushes this year. During grafting and harvest season, it employs almost 400 people.
Jackson & Perkins, acquired by South Carolina-based J&P Park Acquisitions, no longer develops and grows new roses. Before bankruptcy, the company farmed 5,000 acres in Wasco with 20,000 bushes per acre. Without buyers, many of those bushes were burned.
Once a breeder goes bankrupt, its roses usually disappear with it. Rose patents—good for 18 to 20 years—may be sold, but budwood and mother plants are lost. Many Jackson & Perkins roses are now on the endangered list.
“Some will be preserved,” Anderson said. “But a lot of varieties were lost; there was no budwood to collect (to create new hybrid bushes). Most will just disappear into the ether.”

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.
Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

 

Published in: on February 14, 2012 at 5:22 pm  Leave a Comment  
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THE VICAR’S DAUGHTERS COLLECTION

Three beautiful roses bred by the Rev Joseph Pemberton

And named after his daughter’s.

 FELICIA

Delicate soft pink and cream blooms fading to almost white. Flowering is most prolific in the spring, but is a little less so in summer.   However the late summer and autumn show is quite something as the flowers are borne in huge panicles bearing the most highly coloured and longest lasting flowers of the year.  If the spent flowers are not removed, large round red hips are produced which look most attractive among the autumn flowers. Good strong disease resistant foliage. Can really brighten up a  dull autumn day. Shade tolerant and makes a good hedge Excellent Perfume.

National Rose Society Certificate of Merit 1927 Royal Horticultural Society Award Of Garden Merit  1993 Bred by th Rev Joseph Pemberton and named after one of his daughters.

CORNELIA

This lovely old rose has been around a while but is just as popular as ever. A hybrid musk rose with the usual free flowering associated with this species of rose. The lovely rosette flowers are a rich apricot flushed pink and are borne in large arching trusses continually from summer to autumn.  A superb strong growing shrub with very few thorns plus good dark green bronze glossy foliage. Completely hardy but does best in a sunny spot out of the wind. Can be grown in the garden or large container, is shade tolerant and will cope with poorer soils. Distinct Musk Fragrance.

 Royal Horticultural Society Award Of Garden Merit 1993

Bred by the Rev Joseph Pemberton and named after one of his daughters.

 PENELOPE

This is a large, arching shrub with vigorous and disease free growth. It flowers continuously through summer and into autumn and produces a lovely show of hips in winter. The trusses of double, medium sized blooms are of a delicate light pink and apricot shades fading to white with age. ‘Penelope’ makes a fine specimen rose in the garden or an effective informal hedge, and is useful for growing over walls or fences and will cope with partial shade. The blooms are sweetly scented.

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.
Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

 

Published in: on January 22, 2012 at 5:37 pm  Leave a Comment  
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NEW ROSES FOR 2012

LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE 

Floribunda.  2010.  3ft.

One of nicest little floribunda’s in recent years.
Very colourful blooms of yellow fused with orange in clusters of twenty or more.
Repeats well from early summer until the first frosts. Small healthy medium green glossy foliage. A great garden rose or compact enough to grow in a container. Excellent perfume.
A lovely little rose for a girls birthday or christening.

Bred by Dicksons. UK
Awarded a Certificate Of Merit by the Royal National Rose Society.

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.
Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

 

 

Published in: on November 26, 2011 at 8:33 am  Leave a Comment  
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NEW ROSES FOR 2012

OLYMPIC SPIRIT

Floribunda. 1988. 2ft-3ft

An attractive rose with clusters of orange blend blooms which are quite a striking colour.
Flowers in flushes throughout the summer and into autumn and the first frosts.
Produces plenty of blooms so the spent blooms should be removed regularly to promote repeat flowering and to keep the plant tidy.    Nice healthy foliage and good disease resistance.
The stems are not very long being a floribunda, but it does make an attractive cut flower.
Fruity fragrance.

 Not very well known at the moment, but that should all change soon with the next Olympic Games coming to London in 2012.

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.

Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on November 25, 2011 at 7:11 am  Leave a Comment  
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NEW ROSES FOR 2012

MOMENT IN TIME 

Floribunda.  2012   2ft=3ft

ROSE OF THE YEAR  2012

Good red floribundas are always in demand so this one should prove very popular.
Masses of rich ruby red blooms all through the summer until the first frosts.
It was chosen as Rose Of The Year for its excellent health and prolific freedom of flower.
The healthy dark green glossy foliage is almost hidden under the numerous blooms.
Makes a very colourful garden rose and looks great in a container.
Fragrant.
For the best results plant in full sun, dead head regularly and feed in the spring and again in the summer.
Deserves the title ‘Rose Of The Year’

Bred in Germany by Kordes.

AVAILABLE FROM NOVEMBER 2011

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.

Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on November 7, 2011 at 8:51 am  Leave a Comment  
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ROSE OF THE WEEK

One of the most common requests we have is to suggest climbing roses that will grow on a North wall .  Over the next few weeks we will highlight all  the climbers we have  that will  tolerate a Northern aspect.

However you have to accept a simple golden rule.

“More sun. More flowers”

THE PILGRIM

(Rose Of The Week)

 English Rose. David Austin.
1991.  3ft-5ft
The Pilgrim has some of the most perfectly formed blooms.  They are quite large, shallowly cupped, and rosette shaped, the colour is a medium yellow, paling towards the edges giving a softness of colour which is rare among yellow roses.
The fragrance is a delicious mix of the classic Tea scent and the English myrrh scent.
A very healthy and reliable rose.
Equally excellent when kept pruned as a relatively upright but bushy shrub or trained as a climber which should reach around 8ft or more and can also cope with a North wall.

VEILCHENBLAU

Rambling Rose.
1909.   15ft.

A very popular vigorous rambler which is almost thornless.
Pretty blooms of violet streaked with white fading to grey in large  clusters and show prominent yellow stamens.
A lovely sight in full bloom in the summer and flowers a little earlier than most ramblers.
Pale green pointed foliage which is fairly disease free.
Very useful as it will also grow on a North wall or up through a tree.
This is the best known of the three similar violet-purple ramblers, the others being ‘Rose Marie Viaud’ and ‘Violette’.
Scented.

Also known as  ‘Blue Rambler’   ‘Blue Rosalie’  &  ‘Violet Blue’

Royal Horticultural Society Award Of Garden Merit 1993.

ZEPHERINE DROUHIN
(The Thornless Rose)
Climbing Rose. 1868.   10ft.

Lovely blooms of cerise- pink with a white base.
A famous old favourite which is very free flowering over a long period.
Can also be grown as shrub.
One of the very few completely thornless roses available.
A vigorous rose which is easy to grow  and can make a good hedge.
A very useful rose as it can also grow on a North wall, will cope with shade and poor soil.
Lovely perfume.

Also known as ‘Thornless Rose’

Royal Horticultural Society Award Of Garden Merit 1993

SIMILAR ALMOST THORNLESS ROSES.
Climbers & Ramblers.
A Shropshire Lad.   Bleu Magenta. James Galway.     Kathleen Harrop.   Mortimer Sackler.   Rose Marie Viaud.   Veilchenblau.   Violette.
Shrubs. Most Gallica Roses.    Reine de Violettes.   Sophie’s Perpetual.
Some English Roses
A Shropshire Lad.   James Galway.   Goldfinch.   Kew Gardens.   Mortimer Sackler.   Tea Clipper.

For further information , see ‘What Rose Where’ on our web site

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.

Over 1000 varieties of roses to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on October 16, 2011 at 6:42 pm  Leave a Comment  
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NEW ROSES FOR 2012

 CLEOPATRA

Hybrid Tea Rose.

1994.  3ft.

A very beautiful Hybrid Tea that is not very well known which is a great shame as it is quite a stunner.
Outstanding blooms of rich scarlet with deep harvest gold reverse.   The blooms are mostly single but do occasionally appear in clusters.
Repeats well through the season and makes an excellent garden rose and is ideal for cutting.
Good healthy large glossy foliage.
For the best results dead head the blooms regularly.
Fragrant.
Bred by Kordes. Germany.

AVAILABLE FROM NOVEMBER 2011

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.

Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on October 7, 2011 at 7:30 am  Leave a Comment  
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NEW ROSES FOR 2012

ANNABELL

Floribunda.  1972.  3ft.

A real eye-catching floribunda with masses of blooms from May to October.
The blooms are quite a stunning mixture of orange/red blends and make a real statement in the garden.
Has been around for a while but the blooms do well on the show bench and have made it popular for many years.
Fragrant.
Bred by Kordes in Germany.

Also known as Annabell.

AVAILABLE FROM COUNTRY GARDEN ROSES

From November  2011

For details of all our roses see our extensive web site

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

Published in: on September 27, 2011 at 7:03 am  Leave a Comment  
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NEW ROSES FOR 2012

AMELIA

Shrub Rose. 1823.  3ft
A lovely old Alba shrub rose bred by Jean-Pierre Vibert in France.
Quite small for an Alba but has plenty of  large semi double cupped blooms of  pure pink in clusters  with pronounced golden anthers.
Grey green foliage
A very attractive rose with a superb fragrance.
Only summer flowering but  a nice addition to any rose lovers garden.
Also known in France as “Amélie”
Best in full sun but will cope with some shade.

AVAILABLE FROM COUNTRY GARDEN ROSES

From November  2011

For details of all our roses see our extensive web site

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

Published in: on September 25, 2011 at 9:22 am  Leave a Comment  
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ROSE NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

USA

MORE JAPANESE BEETLE HAVOC

Our rose problems are minor compared to other countries.

They seemed to come from nowhere, suddenly appearing on what felt like every branch, petal and leaf in Southwest. Crawling. Flying. Climbing. Gnawing.

After a week or so in the grasp of thousands of tiny mandibles from a species of scarab beetle called popillia japonica—or Japanese Beetles—many area plants have been left looking like swiss cheese, or worse.

As if Southwest’s gardeners needed more to contend with after a summer of wild swings in temperature and sudden, ferocious downpours.

The most public devastation is happening at Lake Harriet’s Rose Gardens, where many of the leaves and flowers have been reduced to skeletons. And gardeners all over Southwest Minneapolis are watching months of personal care nibbled away in a matter of weeks.

The beetles “have taken large chunks out of a variety of foliage all over my neighborhood,” Sharon Hedrick wrote on the Facebook page of Southwest Minneapolis Patch.

“My roses are being destroyed by Japanese beetles,” said Erin Hooper. “I’m trying to spray them away with pesticide, but they aren’t leaving!”

Peggy Poore of Southwest Minneapolis’s Uncommon Gardens, said the local Japanese Beetle population has exploded this year. One visit to the Lyndale Park Rose Garden is enough to see the creatures’ depredations. Typically in bloom this time of year, the garden is riddled with whithered, rotting blossoms and yellowed leaves. Many of these wounded plants are covered with masses of the shiny blue-black creatures.

No surprise—roses are one of the beetles’ favorite foods, according to the University of Minnesota’s Extension school. The beetles also target trees, including some American Elms that line Minneapolis’ streets. So far, said city Park Board officials, they haven’t noticed extensive damage to the trees.

“Oh, that’s just like with our basil back home,” said Marlene Jue, an Ohio native in town visiting her daughter, as she bent over some of the Lyndale Rose Garden’s damaged plants.

The little invaders first appeared in North America in 1916, according to the University, when they were accidentally introduced to New Jersey from Japan. Since then, the beetles have spread steadily westward, arriving in Minnesota in 1972. Japonica numbers are kept in check on the East Coast by two kinds of soil-dwelling, single-celled organisms that reduce numbers of beetle grubs, but no such biological countermeasures exist in Minnesota, according to a fact sheet from the school.

“Our pest company sprayed a combination of products on the beetles, which seems to have scared them away,” Hedrick wrote. “My understanding is that the Japanese Beetle has a grub cycle, so it is also necessary to treat the ground where they lay their eggs. I am still working on that part.

Some Minneapolis gardeners have spent time scraping beetles off their leaves into cups or buckets of soapy water—a beetle dunked into this mixture dies within seconds. But for the dozens of beetles that even the most patient and obsessive gardener can deal with manually, scores more await.

Jue said she and her son Alexander tried a number of different remedies to get rid of the beetles, including spraying soapy water on the basil.

“We couldn’t get rid of them!” she said.

The United State Department of Agriculture has produced the comprehensive “Managing the Japanese Beetle: A Homeowner’s Handbook.” The USDA has compiled other resources here.

Uncommon Gardens’ Poore said her business has so far not been hit badly, but only out of luck.

The University’s extension school recommends going after the beetles’s larvae with pesticides. But with the beetles currently in the middle of their adult mating period, according to Poore, the best remedy is picking the beetles off plants as you see them, before they eat your plants to pieces.

However dire the floral situation may seem right now, said Poore, the end is in sight.

“The cycle is almost over,” she said. “They won’t be around much longer. A lot of plants will survive—they’ll just look bad.”

 For details of all our current roses, see our extensive web site.

Over 1000 varieties to choose from

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on July 31, 2011 at 11:37 am  Leave a Comment  
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