Landscape roses
Amateur Gardening|January 08, 2022
If you want beautiful, lasting ground cover that will also dissuade weeds, have you considered roses? Anne Swithinbank argues the case for landscape roses
Anne Swithinbank
Landscape roses

THERE was a time when I would not allow a rose into my garden unless I was sure that on a warm, sunny day delicious perfume would rise from its petals. My nose refused to be disappointed by light or moderate fragrances but demanded a sweet, fruity richness.

Yet somehow two roses sneaked their way into my borders and changed my mind. Flower Carpet Pink and Rosa ‘Ballerina’ are now relied upon to bring a bank of colour from midsummer into autumn, followed by a display of hips. Their blooms may not be an olfactory treat but their glossy, disease-resistant foliage and masses of flowers more than compensate. Best of all, these are low-maintenance roses and need little more than initial weeding while settling in. Having reached maturity, they knit our plantings together while smothering weeds and flowering year after year.

Ground-cover roses

These useful roses belong to a group of variable origins referred to as landscape, ground-cover, procumbent or even drift roses – words that well describe their use and habit. Plants tend to be wider than they are high and their flowers smaller than average for a rose, with plenty that are single or semi-double to please pollinating insects. Less demanding than other rose types, they are drought tolerant and thrive on poorer soils and in light shade though they flower more profusely in a sunny, south facing position. These roses are great for containers, too, where their draping shape and healthy foliage look better than upright shrub roses and hybrid teas. They put on a good solo performance, or team them with silver artemisias and contrasting verbenas.

Named after game birds

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