Roses

“Real beauty is in the fragility of your petals. A rose that never wilts isn’t a rose at all.” – Crystal Woods

 

Rose - 'Gold Bunny' FLORIBUNDA  Floribunda Rose Gold Bunny - is a classically shaped rose with golden yellow blooms. Mildly fragranced and growing up to 80cm in height, this free flowering rose is an absolute delight for the whole of the flowering season.

Floribunda roses provide a colourful display from late spring to late autumn, and will often spot flower even in winter. Medium bushes producing clusters of flowers that open continuously from small buds ensure that areis nearly always some flowers evident. Floribunda roses are hardy, vigorous, long (repeat) flowering and disease resistant making them ideal plants to have in large pots or as hedges or borders.

Hybrid Tea Rose - Valencia  Hybrid Tea Rose Valencia - is a beautifully fragrant rose with large old gold to copper coloured blooms. The vigorous healthy bush has dark green foliage which sets the flower colour off perfectly. Long stems mean this rose is wonderful in a vase.

Hybrid Tea roses provide a colourful display from late spring to late autumn. Upright bushes produce classically shaped blooms on long stems making them wonderful to grow as cutflowers. Hybrid Tea roses are hardy, vigorous, long (repeat) flowering and disease resistant making them ideal plants to have in large pots or as hedges or borders.

Rose - Seduction  Floribunda Rose Bold Seductionis an impressive floribunda rose with clusters of exquisite ivory cream, semi double blooms edged with cerise pink.

Floribunda roses provide a colourful display from late spring to late autumn, and will often spot flower even in winter. Medium bushes producing clusters of flowers that open continuously from small buds ensure that there are nearly always some flowers evident. Floribunda roses are hardy, vigorous, long (repeat) flowering and disease resistant making them ideal plants to have in large pots or as hedges or borders.

 

Rose Growing Advice

The best time to start planting is June/May, this is when they will start to spread roots and get ready for spring. 

Pruning does not harm the rose at all, you will not kill the rose by pruning – so don't stress! Pruning is best done mid to late winter or early spring - remember to hold off until the most severe frosts have passed in frost prone areas.