A ROSE FOR EVERY OCCASION
Dawn Chorus |
Roses
have always had pride of place in my garden. As a young trainee gardener in the
sixties education was very important to produce first class gardeners who would
maintain Dundee’s parks and open spaces to a very high standard. To achieve
this we had a five year apprenticeship with day release classes and to get a
wide experience all apprentices were shifted from one park to another including a spell in the greenhouses and
nursery and even a few months in the office to see how landscape planning and
design were done. You met a lot of very knowledgeable and experienced gardeners
who all had different gardening interests. There were carnation growers,
tuberous begonia exhibitors, rock garden specialists, vegetable growers and fruit
growers, but it was the rose growers that earned my deepest respect. There was
always something very romantic about roses and it was a time when there
popularity was never greater. There were numerous specialist rose growers all
over the country. We had Crolls in Dundee and the nursery in Camperdown grew
them by the thousand to meet the demand as our Parks Director wanted to spread
colour and beauty all over the town.
Mme Alfred Carriere |
Our
training included a summer spell in the rose fields budding roses for weeks at
a time. Those moments stayed with me all my life and I frequently bought in rose
briar to bud my own roses as I travelled all over the UK.
When I
went to College at Writtle near Chelmsford in 1968 I took on a special project
to grow a rose pot plant using softwood cuttings of the scented hybrid tea rose
Wendy Cussons. One pot took three rooted cuttings and I kept them dwarf with a
growth retardant. It worked brilliantly and I new this could be worth pursuing,
but my future destiny lay in another direction, so I left this task for others
to follow and perfect.
Roses
have always been a must in my garden in beds, borders, along fences and
clothing walls no matter which way they faced.
E H Morse |
I keep
some on my allotment for cutting for the house so a scented rose with a well shaped
head is important. Rose growing for cut flowers is a major industry and
breeders have worked very hard to find a range of roses that last long in a
vase after cutting. Just a pity they never found one that was also scented. We
recently received a gorgeous bouquet of roses and lilies that lasted a good
fortnight. The roses still looked good after all the lilies had gone over, but
it was the lilies that had the outstanding scent.
Graham Thomas |
Today
even those with the smallest garden can still plant a rose as patio roses have
become very popular.
Boundary
fences are a perfect location for numerous climbers and ramblers and if you
have ample border space shrub roses will make great specimens if allowed to
grow with the minimum of pruning.
Always
check out the nature of the rose bush before you buy them as there is a massive
varience in growth from one to another. My climber Mme Alfred Carrier is easily
over ten feet tall and showing no signs of slowing down. My other climber
Dublin bay on a south facing wall has had to be stopped at about 18 feet tall
as it has reached the roof.
This has
been a great year for the roses as it has been relatively dry and black spot
has not yet been too serious. They have really been brilliant as our hot summer
continues.
Plant of the week
Yucca filamentosa known as the needle palm is
a broad leaved exotic evergreen growing in clumps with the flower spikes of
cream coloured flowers up to ten feet tall in summer. Although very hardy it
prefers a sheltered spot with well drained soil. It has a distinct
architectural form that looks great beside walls, courtyards and buildings.
END