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GROWING ROSES IN VERMONT
By Dr. Leonard Perry, Extension Professor
University of Vermont
The rose, one of the most elegant of all flowers, is often
called the "queen of the flowers." It is a title richly
deserved, both for its long reign as a cultivated plant and for
its beauty, versatility in the landscape, and ability to survive...with
just a little pampering.
Roses also owe their continued popularity in part to royalty.
The French Empress Josephine made roses fashionable for everyone
in the 19th century by planting a beautiful palace
rose garden of all the varieties available at the time.
Roses do best in full sun and well-drained, slightly acidic
(6 to 6.5 pH) soil. The key is to keep them well watered and
in well-drained soil as they don't like waterlogged soils. This
is essential for healthy growth. However, once planted, they
will survive, and continue to thrive, in the same bed, providing
you add fertilizer on a regular basis. The latter is especially
critical to the health of the plants.
Adding organic matter to the soil is always beneficial, but
in the case of roses it may not be enough. Unless the soil is
very fertile, you will need to add rose fertilizer (check your
local garden center for this product) per directions on the label.
You also may combine organic products such as seaweed or fish
emulsion with a controlled release fertilizer (usually non-organic).
Hybrid tea roses usually require higher soil fertility than shrub
types.
Although early spring is generally the best time to plant
roses in cold climates, roses may be successfully planted in
late summer or early autumn as long as they are protected over
winter. Do not plant roses after the first few weeks of fall
as there won't be enough time for most to get rooted.
Spring, not fall, is the time to plant bare-root roses, just
as or before buds are beginning to break. Spring is, in fact,
the only time you usually can get them either through mail order
from specialty rose catalogs or on-line ordering on the Internet.
For best results, choose hardy varieties. "Modern"
hybrids (those developed after 1867) generally aren't hardy except
in warm microclimates in Vermont, but ask your local garden center
experts what they would recommend for your location.
In research trials at the University of Vermont Research Center
in S. Burlington (U.S. Department of Agriculture hardiness zone
4b), conducted over a three-year period (1998-2000), I took a
look at several types of shrub roses. This class of roses is
generally more hardy than most hybrid teas, floribundas, grandifloras,
miniature, and climbing roses, and thus, more practical for Vermont.
The period of my study included both wet weather and a drought
(summer 1999). For a complete listing of cultivars tested and
their ratings, visit <http://pss.uvm.edu/ppp/rosedata.htm>
To plant roses, dig as large a hole as possible, but at least
two times as wide and across as the roots. Amend the backfill
with up to half compost, peat moss, or similar organic matter.
Add a tablespoon or two of phosphorus depending on the size of
the hole at planting. Set the plant in the hole and spread out
the roots evenly. Make sure the bud graft (the lower, swollen
area on most roses) is covered with at least two inches of soil.
If planting bare root, mound the soil over most of the canes
to help prevent buds and canes from drying out and suckers from
forming below the bud graft. Staking is generally not needed,
but climbing types will need to be trained to travel up a wall
or trellis.
To encourage vigor, roses need to be pruned, but wait until
spring as pruning in fall may cause dieback or allow diseases
to enter wounds with slow, or no, healing of the wounds. Diseased
or dead wood should be removed, however. Adding fresh horse manure
at this time is a good way to add nutrients to the soil, but
the main purpose in fall is to mound over canes to protect overwinter.
Mice won't live in this!
Fall-planted roses will need winter protection their first
year, as do less hardy varieties every year. Use rose cones,
mounding one foot or more of mulch, such as straw, around the
base if rodents aren't a problem. Otherwise, use soil. Apply
late in the season, usually around hanksgiving. Climbing roses,
if not hardy, will need to be removed from the supports and laid
on the ground and covered as recommended above. Mulches should
be removed in the spring as soon as the snow has melted.
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