There are roses… and then there are roses! A couple of centuries ago, when these summer charmers first became the must-have plants for any self-respecting British garden, most roses were ‘once-flowering’, making an appearance solely in June/July, with a single flush of blooms that lasted for several weeks. The odd flower would sometimes pop up in late summer or autumn, but these were too sporadic to be considered a ‘second flush’.
These were the roses that dominated gardens until around 80 or so years ago when the new, highly dramatic (but also single-flush) hybrid tea and floribunda bush types became incredibly popular.
More recently, however, a growing number of gardeners have started seeking out options with a longer season of bloom, and luckily there are shrub, climber and rambler roses that can deliver just that. Most nurseries call them simply ‘repeat-flowerers’, but occasionally you’ll see certain roses listed by their official descriptive terms: ‘recurrent’ and ‘remontant’. The distinction is quite subtle; while the former produces regular flowers over the summer, in a continuous process of bud formation, varieties of the latter offer successive bursts of blooms throughout the season.
Hit hybrids
Esta historia es de la edición June 27, 2020 de Amateur Gardening.
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Esta historia es de la edición June 27, 2020 de Amateur Gardening.
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