We strive for the
highest quality
in plant material, to provide you with the best possible results
in your garden and landscape projects.
Professional advice on all aspects
of plant culture is readily available from a friendly, well-trained
staff.
Climbing roses are vigorous, easy to
grow, and add a lot to your garden. Not only do they provide a
plentiful amount of blooms and fragrance, but they can also play a
strong and versatile utilitarian role in the garden. They can make a
dramatic addition to a landscape. Their size and habit allows them
to be used as an architectural feature. Climbers can be trained on a
fence or trellis to provide screening or garden walls. They can
frame a window or doorway. When trained on an arbor they can create
a dazzling entry or doorway to other parts of the garden. They can
even be used as a focal point when grown on a pillar frame.
To get
the most out of your climbing roses, here are a few simple
tips to assure an abundance of bloom and enjoyment in your
garden:
Site
Selection
Roses
do best in full sun. While they tolerate some
shade, they will bloom more and grow more dense
and full when they receive at least 4-6 hours of
direct sun each day. Also, pick a site that will
accommodate the climber’s growth habit. Climbers
can grow from 6 – 12 feet tall (even taller with
some!) and spread almost as wide.
Prepare
the Soil
Roses
are quite adaptable to many types of soil, but they
do their best in rich, fertile, loamy soil with good
drainage. No matter what soil is in your garden it
can be improved with the addition of organic matter
such as compost, mulch or peat moss. This will
improve drainage in heavy clay soils and improve
water retention in sandy soils.
Plant
as Soon as Possible
One
of the best ways to buy climbing roses are as
bareroot plants. The plants are dormant at this
time. This makes them easy to handle and plant.
Bareroot planting season begins in late winter or
early spring when the soil has thawed and is
workable. Planting at this time allows the roots to
get established in their new home before the hot
weather of summer arrives. Because they haven’t
been pampered in a potting soil media, their roots
get established in the indigenous garden soil very
quickly.
Pick
a Suitable Fence or Structure
to Train Your Climbing Roses
Climbing
roses do not twine or have tendrils to attach
themselves to a structure. They need something
sturdy that they can be loosely secured to or woven
through. One trick to make climbing roses produce
more bloom is to train them more laterally than
vertically. When trained more horizontally, climbers
will produce short spurs along their main stems or
canes and these will produce blooms (very similar to
practices used on apple or fruit trees to increase
bloom and fruit-set).
Fertizile
Your Climbers
It
takes a lot of energy to produce all those large,
magnificent blooms! Fertilize regularly with a
balanced fertilizer that provides ample amounts of
all the necessary nutrients. Avoid fertilizers meant
for lawns. These tend to be quite high in nitrogen.
This will produce a very lush, dark green plant, but
less blooms.
Go
Easy on the Pruning
Climbers
need little or no pruning the first two years. Many
of the older climbing varieties tend to bloom on
second-year canes. If it has been pruned back each
year like hybrid teas and other shrub roses then
bloom production will be minimal. Plan on pruning
climbing roses every three or four years. At this
time, remove small, twiggy canes and old, woody,
less vigorous canes at the base of the plant in
favor of the young, vigorous canes that are long and
flexible. These can then be trained onto or through
the structure provided.
Of
course Heritage has a wide variety of climbing roses to
choose from. Visit Heritage today! Get
driving directions here.
Our
well-stocked Garden Center provides all of the aids needed
for keeping your garden at peak performance, as well as providing gift
items of special seasonal interest: pottery, books, tools and
a large assortment of seeds and bulbs.
We
are able to deliver and plant any material that we sell.