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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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I started getting my roses ready for summer,but I notices some of the stems were of a rusty tin brown color. I looked in most of my rose books and can not find anything that will help me out in that area. I live in Colorado so I usually start about now. to get my flowers ready. But could you possible tell me what might be wrong with them. They have been with me since 2015 and this is the first time I have ever seen them like this.
I want to have a beautiful rose garden with other flowers of course in my front yard. This is the East which should be the morning sun. This spot is very shady in the afternoon. There is a pear tree in the front as well but I trimmed it way back to give that area more light. The side of the house gets midday and evening sun so I hope this will be good?
I enjoyed reading this article about roses. I did not find any pest name in which attack rose.
I have also written an article on roses. would love if someone read and tell me about my writing skills
I have some beautiful roses in my yard. They are mostly hibred. They were orange, peach, white, Purple and yellow. All of a sudden some these roses have turned to wild roses. Why did this happen?
I have five rose bushes by my porch and four of the five are going wild. I have a couple of roses on the plants but I have branches 5 1/2 ft tall. Will it hurt my roses if I cut these branches down to the same size as the rest of the plants? Also, the roses I have I had 3 red roses, a yellow rose, and a purple rose. This year I have all red roses. Could the ground that the roses are growing in cause the roses to change colors. I live on the East coast of North Carolina.
Wild roses typically are very thorny and sprout up new shoots near the base. If you are going to keep it and prune it, remove all the dead, decaying canes, thin the remaining canes down to just several. You will need to continually remove the spouts as they appear near the base and into the surrounding area during the summer. Each year you will need to leave a few new ones, as the older ones will need to be pruned away. This way you can maintain the size of the plant.
Last year (or the year before?) in zone 8b, I bought a Belinda's dream rose (in a 3 gallon container). It quickly grew very large and I love it. This year I have been keeping my eyes open for more to plant, and had a hard time. I finally found and bought some in 1 gallon containers (for $10/piece), but then was informed of a nearby nursery selling ones in 3 gallon containers (for $20/piece). At first I was inclined to return the smaller ones for the bigger ones, assuming that they would grow faster, but then I wondered if it's possible that the smaller ones might grow to the same size by the end of the summer. What do you think?
The reason I would like them to grow bigger faster is because my 4 dogs have too good of a view of all the neighborhood dogs being walked and are barking all the time.
Hi Rebecca,
That’s definitely a good way to keep your dogs from barking, and to give your yard a nice look! While at first the 3 gallon the 1 gallon potted roses might grow at a similar rate, as time goes on, the roses with less space (the 1 gallon ones) would grow more slowly. Their roots will become crowded and slowly stunt the growth of the roses, so It might be better to get the 3 gallon potted roses instead.
A problem: the rose bush I planted in the fall goes through the winter all right -- comes alive in the spring, turns green, seems to be happy -- and then suddenly the leaves start to brown -- and dry up -- and it's game over. This has happened a couple times. Is it a watering problem? not getting enough water?
It sounds like botrytis blight, a fungal disease. For the best specific advice, contact your local cooperative extension, which you can find here: /content/cooperative-extension-services