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Everything You Need to Know About Roses

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Is there any flower more abundant in sensory overload than a rose? Good looks, delicious scent, wonderful for cutting, easy to grow (so long as you give them a good mulch every winter, for they are hungry plants), and, depending on which you choose, a long and glorious flowering season. Few perennials can stop you in your tracks like a mature rose in full bloom rambling over an aged outbuilding or climbing up the walls of a country house—or any other house for that matter. Roses pretty much tick all the boxes.

But for all their good points, roses also may seem like complicated plants to understand. For a start, there are more than a hundred species, which have thousands of varieties in almost as many colors, all of which seem to have slightly different habits and requirements—and if you are choosing roses, it’s very much a case of selecting the right plant for the right place.

Where to start? Most roses are either shrubs, ramblers, or climbers (and to add to the confusion, some shrub roses can also be trained to grow as a climber). Roses are woody perennials with stems that do not die back in winter—and over the years, those stems will look more like gnarly branches (and will weigh far more than soft stems, requiring a sturdy support if your rose is a climber).

Read on to learn everything you need to know about different kinds of roses, how to select the best rose for your landscape, and how to make sure it thrives after your plant it.

Shrub Roses

‘Iceberg’ roses in Gardenista editor Michelle Slatalla’s garden are trained as both shrubs and climbers (and intertwine on the fence with ‘New Dawn’). See more in Landscape on a Budget: The $250 Instant Rose Garden. Photograph by Mimi Giboin.
Above: ‘Iceberg’ roses in Gardenista editor Michelle Slatalla’s garden are trained as both shrubs and climbers (and intertwine on the fence with ‘New Dawn’). See more in Landscape on a Budget: The $250 Instant Rose Garden. Photograph by Mimi Giboin.

The most prolific group is the modern shrub rose, which includes the majority of the roses you might pick up in a nursery or garden center. The term covers a very diverse set of bushy plants that were largely bred in the early 20th century and are often hybrid musks through to more modern hybrids.

Introduced in 1937, ‘Ballerina’ will sprawl or climb, depending on how you train it. See more of this hybrid musk rose in Garden Visit: A Backyard Meadow in Mill Valley, CA. Photograph by Mimi Giboin.
Above: Introduced in 1937, ‘Ballerina’ will sprawl or climb, depending on how you train it. See more of this hybrid musk rose in Garden Visit: A Backyard Meadow in Mill Valley, CA. Photograph by Mimi Giboin.

Shrub roses come in many different sizes from a couple of feet tall (these ground cover roses include the sugary pink Surrey rose) to more than five feet.

The hybrid musk ‘Buff Beauty’ is £19.99 from Crocus.
Above: The hybrid musk ‘Buff Beauty’ is £19.99 from Crocus.
‘Buff Beauty’, bred in 1939, is one of the most elegant of the larger shrubs and has exquisite apricot yellow flowers, glossy foliage, and a light tea fragrance.

English Roses

Pink ‘Gertrude Jekyll’ is $28.50 in the US and £17.50 in the UK from David Austin Roses; here it is planted alongside Epilobium and Geranium ‘Brookside’. See more in Nursery Visit: David Austin Roses in Shropshire.
Above: Pink ‘Gertrude Jekyll’ is $28.50 in the US and £17.50 in the UK from David Austin Roses; here it is planted alongside Epilobium and Geranium ‘Brookside’. See more in Nursery Visit: David Austin Roses in Shropshire.
“English Roses” is a term coined by the prolific UK-based rose breader David Austin to encompass the 100-plus cultivars that he has produced at his vast nursery in Shropshire, where many thousands of seedlings are raised each year in a huge breeding program. Austin has produced many modern classics—including the intense deep pink of ‘Gertrude Jekyll’ and the deep maroon velvety ‘Munstead Wood’—in his quest for the perfect rose that combines healthy growth and a pleasing habit with beautiful floriferous blooms and fantastic fragrance.

Old Roses

‘Charles de Mills.’ Photograph by T.Kiya via Flickr.
Above: ‘Charles de Mills.’ Photograph by T.Kiya via Flickr.

Old Roses are another broad group that includes many old varieties of Gallica, Damask, Alba, and Centifolia (including the intriguing Moss roses) that predate the mid-19th century. ‘Charles de Mills’ (1790) and ‘Souvenir de la Malmaison’ (1843) are typical of these old roses. Rosa mundi, which predates them all by many centuries, is a once-flowering Gallica rose with masses of striped pink flowers.

Rosa mundi by Judy Dean via Flickr. See more of this rose in Garden Visit: At Home with Writer Daisy Garnett in London. Photograph by Clare Coulson.
Above: Rosa mundi by Judy Dean via Flickr. See more of this rose in Garden Visit: At Home with Writer Daisy Garnett in London. Photograph by Clare Coulson.

Gallica, Damask, Alba, and Centifolia roses tend to be once-flowering while Bourbons, which are also considered an old rose, can often be repeat-flowering. These roses are valued for their exquisitely beautiful blooms and fragrance. Rosa mutabilis, a tea rose bred in 1894, is rare in combining a long flowering season with extraordinary blooms that range from apricot and copper to deep pink.

Hybrid Teas and Floribundas

Introduced in 2005 by rose breeder DeRuiter, ‘Cafe Latte’ is a hybrid tea rose. Photograph by T.Kiya via Flickr.
Above: Introduced in 2005 by rose breeder DeRuiter, ‘Cafe Latte’ is a hybrid tea rose. Photograph by T.Kiya via Flickr.

Hybrid teas were first created when a tea rose (any scented cultivar of Rosa × odorata) was crossed with a hybrid perpetual rose (a Bourbon crossed with nearly any other rose). Hybrid tea roses are instantly recognizable for their distinctive shape and large pointed buds. They come in a huge palette of colors—some garish—and grow on stiff stems. Hugely popular in the ’40s and ’50s, these are often the roses we associate with granny’s garden. Floribunda roses are also the result of a hybrid tea cross—in this case with Polyantha roses—and have clusters of big flowers that usually have a long flowering season. They are less known for their scent. ‘Iceberg’, bred in 1958, is typical of this type of rose.

Wild Roses

White alliums create an airy backdrop for Rosa glauca. For a similar pink shrub rose with dark plum-colored leaves, consider Rosa Glauca; available seasonally for $18.95 from High Country Roses. For more of this garden, see Gatehouse Garden: A Dramatic Black Backdrop for a White Wildflower Meadow. Photograph by Rosangela Photography, courtesy of Stefano Marinaz Landscape Architecture.
Above: White alliums create an airy backdrop for Rosa glauca. For a similar pink shrub rose with dark plum-colored leaves, consider Rosa Glauca; available seasonally for $18.95 from High Country Roses. For more of this garden, see Gatehouse Garden: A Dramatic Black Backdrop for a White Wildflower Meadow. Photograph by Rosangela Photography, courtesy of Stefano Marinaz Landscape Architecture.
Roses aren’t just for beds and borders. Some tougher customers can cope with being in open ground. Rosa rugosa, native to Asia and Russia and brilliant for challenging coastal conditions, and species roses (roses that have not been hybridized) can cope with much more natural conditions and less cosseting. They also tend to have more simple five-petaled flowers, which are much easier for bees and pollinators to reach. Rosa rugosa ‘Scabrosa’ has beautiful mid-pink flowers while the Alba variety, as the name suggests, has pure white flowers.

Ramblers vs. Climbers

‘New Dawn’ reaches for the sky. Photograph by Mimi Giboin.
Above: ‘New Dawn’ reaches for the sky. Photograph by Mimi Giboin.

What’s the difference between a rambler and a climber? Quite a lot, actually. All climbing roses will reach for the skies (although some climbers are relatively short, growing only to six or eight feet, while other more vertiginous cultivars such as ‘Cecile Bruner’ or ‘Madame Alfred Carriere’ can happily clamber up to the second story of a house), and they tend to have larger flowers and are often repeat-flowering. Enduring favorites such as ‘New Dawn’ are popular for a reason, with beautiful pink flowers, healthy growth, and delicious fragrance.

‘Paul’s Himalayan Musk’ rambles across a fence. Photograph by T.Kiya via Flickr.
Above: ‘Paul’s Himalayan Musk’ rambles across a fence. Photograph by T.Kiya via Flickr.

Ramblers meanwhile tend to be vigorous with more delicate clusters of blooms that often only flower once—although many modern ramblers will flower more than once. Choose a rambler if you want a rose to run rampant along hedges or over outbuildings and old sheds. The beautiful ‘Frances E Lester’ is a delicate, creamy rose with delicious fragrance and beautiful orange hips. The soft pink ‘Paul’s Himalayan Musk’ is another favorite, famed, as the name suggests, for its heady fragrance.

‘Paul’s Himalayan Musk’ in action. For more of this garden, see 10 Ideas to Steal from the Romantic Gardens at Kiftsgate Court. Photograph by Clare Coulson.
Above: ‘Paul’s Himalayan Musk’ in action. For more of this garden, see 10 Ideas to Steal from the Romantic Gardens at Kiftsgate Court. Photograph by Clare Coulson.

The notoriously thuggish ‘Kiftsgate’ can clamber 40 feet up into a tree, where it will drip in huge clusters of creamy white flowers in midsummer. Ramblers need very little attention while most climbers are usually trained and pruned in the winter wherever you are growing them—over pergolas or up fences and walls.

Noisettes

‘Morgan Spring’ is a noisette rose. Photograph by Malcolm Manners via Flickr.
Above: ‘Morgan Spring’ is a noisette rose. Photograph by Malcolm Manners via Flickr.

Special mention should be given to the exquisitely pretty Noisettes, bred from tea roses, which can be bushy or vigorous climbers that produce huge sprays of small dainty flowers often in pretty blush tones.

How do you choose a rose?

For more of this garden, see The Magicians: An English Professor and a Novelist Conjure a Garden in Brooklyn. Photograph by Nicole Franzen.
Above: For more of this garden, see The Magicians: An English Professor and a Novelist Conjure a Garden in Brooklyn. Photograph by Nicole Franzen.

First of all, think about what you want it to do: If you want to use it in a mixed border then most shrub roses are well suited, but consider its eventual size when you are planning its position. If you are choosing a climber or rambler to cover a pergola or wall or even a building, then choose the right variety for the scale of the job. The right rose will largely be down to your personal preference of color, scent, and the shape of the blooms (which again ranges widely from delicate open cups or frothy pompoms to the delicate singles). There are some roses that seem to do it all—’Lady Emma Hamilton’ has beautiful bronze foliage, exquisite pink-tinged orange flowers, and the most delicious fruity scent. It’s hard to beat.

For more of our favorite (and highly perfumed) roses, see:

N.B.: Considering some new plants for your garden? Our Garden Design 101 guides can help:

  • See Peony 101 for showstopping blooms.
  • Need more information on planting, care, and design? Use our Perennials 101 guide for everything you need to know.

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