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Planting, Growing, and Caring for Roses
Recipes
Cooking Notes
The tart reddish-orange hips of rugosa roses are used for jams, jellies, syrups, pies, teas, and wine. Check out our Rose Hip Jam recipe.
Rose petals are edible and can be tossed into salads for color, candied to decorate cakes, or distilled to make rose water. Make sure the rose petals are pesticide free.
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Hi,
is it true that Ivy can suffocate my rosebush?
My rosebush has stopped flowering, lost all it's leaves - friends tell me, its due to the Ivy growing in the pot along the rosebush.
Is that true? What can I do?
Thank you!
There is a good chance that the English ivy has contributed to your shrub’s decline. Roses need excellent air circulation and a lot of sunlight. The ivy will have suppressed both. Defoliation often happens when a rose has black spot, a fungal disease to which they are highly susceptible, especially if air circulation is poor and they are not getting enough light. You should remove all of the ivy now. It is an invasive species so pull the roots out too (it will come back again and again so you will need to continue to pull it out each year). Sure hope your rose bounces back next spring!
My climbing rose is not producing flowers anymore. It did in the spring but hasn't since. I've been putting coffee grounds on it a lot and it's been growing like a weed, but no flowers? It gets at least 5-6 hrs. of sun a day. Any ideas?
Hi Paula,
It is likely you have a climber that blooms only once a season. Many do. They have one big flush and that’s it until next year.
Do you have to have male and female rose plants to grow flowers. If this is a fact how do they differ in appearance?
Roses are called 鈥減erfect,鈥 since they have both male and female parts on the same flower. The male stamens look like thin stalks (called filaments), each with a knob up top (anther) that contains the pollen. The stamens are on the outside of the flower center. The female pistils (each of which contain a stigma, style, and ovary) are in the very center of the flower. The pistils, if pollinated, will develop seeds in a fruit called a rose hip.
Is there another reason for using mulch other then winter protection? I just find that grass will eventually grow up among the mulch and harder to pull out. I planted my new rose bushes in my grass lawn and I trimmed the grass that grew close to the bush with scissors. Do they need border? If so, why? Thanks.
Hi Mai,
Protecting the crown of roses with mulch, especially in cold-climate regions, is very important. That is the place where the desired rose species was grafted onto the hardy rootstock, and it is sensitive to cold and harsh elements. If damaged or compromised by freezing conditions, your roses could die. In terms of letting the lawn grow around the roses, that is not ideal, as it will wick water away from rose roots before it has time to seep down and reach them (you might think you are watering your roses, but you are really watering your lawn). The same will be true with fertilizer applications. Roses like good air circulation. Providing them with open growing conditions (including a ring around the crown) helps with that.
Helpful hints And suggestions.
there are holes on rose leaves bitten by insects for the past 2 weeks . I would appreciate to have recommendation on the repellent product to kill the insect.