Remember Me
forgot your password?

Promise Her a Rose Garden, an Antique Rose Garden

Why antiques? Antique roses are those breed by species, sports, varieties, or cultivars prior to the first hybrid tea, (LaFrance) in 1867. Some people are not as strict in their interpretation of antique roses as the American Rose Society, and claim any rose 75 years or older as being old.

Why antiques? They have withstood the test of time. Many are alive and well, living in old grave yards, home sites, and near public buildings that are over 100 years old. Although some get black spot or something, they nevertheless flourish.

Why antiques? Modern day roses, especially the hybrid teas have to be pampered and babysat. Not only do they have to be fertilized, watered, and prune just right to live for any length of time. Hybrid teas are usually grafted on to other root stock. It appears to most horticulturalists they plants are hardier on their own rootstock.

Why antiques? Hybrid teas have been breed for form of flower, how well they do in vases, and repeat bloom. Fragrance, hardiness, and other great qualities have mostly disappeared, although now there are hybridizers experimentally with fragrance. I read recently of petunias being used in experiments to give hybrid teas and other new roses an old flower smell. For the most part, new roses make the ugliest of bushes, whereas the antiques are often graceful in form.

In the late 1700's to early 1800's, visitors to China, specifically botanists, brought back to the west rose that would bloom more than once a year, called remontant. They named these roses "China" Roses and "Tea" Roses. Until then, all roses in the west bloomed only once a year. These were the hardy roses, sports, and varieties grown in the Americas, Europe, and parts of Asia. These roses flourished in the wild, even.

The Chinas and Teas did very well in warm climates. In northern Europe, they could not withstand the cold. So nurserymen and other began crossing the Tea and Chinas with such native species as the dog rose, the Centifolias, Damasks, and Gallicas. The end product of all this hybridizing produced Bourbons, Grandifolias, Hybrid Perpetuals, Noisettes, Portlands, Polyanthas, etc.

Old roses look spectacular in all types of situations. The native species of rose go swell with other natives, especially on rustic, naturalistic sites. Antique roses look well in rustic garden laid out formally or informally. Most old roses look fantastic in abstract modern, baroque, or classical formal or informal gardens. The antiques set off perennials, herbs, and other shrubs in the border. They are at home on either city plots or vast estates.

So the least you can do for your one and only is to give her a rose garden. After all, Napoleon gave Josephine, "Malmaison", outside Paris, reportedly the greatest rose garden since ancient times.

Josephine had a painter who strolled around her garden painting flowers, particularly roses. His name is Redoubte and his works command a high price.

Some of the rose varieties grown at Malmaison can be purchased today, as well as, many others. Petals From the Past in Jemison, Alabama is a great place. So is the Antique Rose Emporium in Tyler, Texas and Suburban Atlanta. In Watsonville, California, there is Roses of Yesterday and Today.

You can order old roses from http://www.antiqueroseemporium.com/ and http://www.rosesofyesterday.com/rosenn.htm.

August Holcombe

My name is August and I am a baby boomer. I retired 4 years ago. I enjoy gardening, reading, and studying finance and investments.
Visit my Contemporary Home Gardens blog and my Contemporary Home Gardens Website. Please visit my website,Contemporary Garden Design and my blog, Contemporary
Home Gardens

Rate this Article: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s)
Print Email Re-Publish

Add new Comment



Captcha

  • Latest Gardening Articles
  • More from August Holcombe

The Chelsea Flower Show - A Feast for your Horiticultural Imagination

By: Chow Siew | 15/12/2009
The Chelsea Flower Show is a paradise for flower and plant enthusiasts. Visitors to the flower show pick up valuable garden design ideas and tips for their own gardens. There are opportunities to buy cheap show flowers at the end of the show with useful instructions from the growers.

Homemade Water Garden Fountains

By: Jason Boonstra | 15/12/2009
Thrill all your guests with these simple steps to building homemade water garden fountains. Having a setting with water garden fountains will offer great benefits to the owner and will bring enjoyment for years to come.

Designing Simple Water Garden Features

By: Jason Boonstra | 15/12/2009
Why not design a simple water garden features in your backyard? The design is fairly straightforward and the payoff is huge! Enjoy the benefits of having your own water garden features to enjoy year round.

How to reduce Stomach Fat Quickly

By: Owen Linnen | 15/12/2009
There are some things gurs recommend to get six pack abs and burn fat, well what must you consume? Well, here's the secret that nobody else will tell you about.

Growing The Best Thyme Garden Herb

By: Brian Chamberlain | 15/12/2009
Thyme garden herb is a variety of herb, which is grown for many different applications. The most common use for thyme is cooking, but it can also be found in medicinal applications as well as aromatherapy. The applications you will use the thyme for will depend on the kind of thyme you are growing, as not every thyme is created equal. In fact, some varieties of thyme will not even have a scent while others will perfume the air all around you.

A Few Useful Vegetable Gardening Tips

By: Clifford S. Magno | 15/12/2009
There is nothing as satisfying as working in your home garden to watch vegetables grow after putting in all the hard work and money. Successful gardening is much more than just popping a few seeds in the ground and waiting for vegetables to grow.

Learn Some New Techniques With French Vegetable Gardening

By: Clifford S. Magno | 15/12/2009
Europeans generally tend to own less land than Americans, so they need to be more efficient in their allocation. The French are a prime example of European ingenuity when it comes to land usage, as exemplified by their gardens. A much larger percentage of French cultivate their own gardens as well, and their practices differ slightly from our own, and we can draw many useful lessons from their methods.

Garden Irrigation Water Timers

By: Shaded Nation | 15/12/2009
Garden irrigation water timers are best considered for garden watering. The automated machines not only enable one to stay tension-free but also help in saving valuable water.

Add Bucks to Your Home and Yard's Bottom Line

By: August Holcombe | 04/05/2007 | Gardening
Musings on the different styles that are used these days. Reasons given why you should use formal or informal gardening styles.

Promise Her a Rose Garden, an Antique Rose Garden

By: August Holcombe | 04/05/2007 | Gardening
Antique Roses,unlike Hybrid Teas and Floribundas, are easy. They also live a very long time, especially if they are on their own rootstock (not grafted).

Make Your Flower Borders the Envy of the Neighborhood

By: August Holcombe | 01/05/2007 | Gardening
How to create mixed borders of flowering plants. Add drifts of perennials, annuals, herbs and shrubs, such as roses.

Submit Your Articles Free: Signup
Article Categories




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved. (3.36, 6, w1)