Antique Roses
Steve Bridges
Kimas
Tejas Nursery
Chances are you have admired the beauty and
fragrance
of a rose at least once in your life. Roses stand out from the rest of our gardening
plants due to their beauty and fragrance and their long history of cultivation.
Memories are reawakened at the fragrance of a rose long forgotten, perhaps taking
you back to your grandmothers yard when you where a child. You may have even
tried to recreate the rose gardens you remembered from your childhood. For the
beginner, rose gardening can be intimidating. It need not be! A movement to
preserve old garden roses began in the late 1930’s. Since that time, many ‘rose
rustlers’ have discovered old roses growing in abandoned cemeteries, old homesites,
and along the roadsides of the south. These roses have been found growing without
much assistance and have proven to be very tough and easy to grow. With the
help of the nursery trades, these roses have been introduced back into popular
culture with much acclaim. The reasons for their success are many!
When you take two varieties of a plant and cross-pollinate, you have created
a hybrid.
Certain
desirable characteristics are breed into the new plant and some desirable characteristics
are breed out of the new plant. Most hybrid roses are bred for their rose form
and color. Many times the overall beauty and form of the rose bush is disregarded
in this chase for the perfect rose. Antique roses, as opposed to hybrid roses,
are grown on their own rootstock. This makes them hardier to temperature extremes
and less prone to disease. The inherent growth characteristics of a rose that
has not been hybridized tends to be more naturally formed and not grown just
for the beauty of the rose itself. Old rose colors will tend to be less dramatic
than hybrids but the number and fragrance of the blooms more than makes up for
this one small fault. After they have become established, antique roses will
require much less attention to maintain and keep alive and beautiful than their
younger cousins will.
So where do you begin? As antique roses are a natural extension of a style
of
gardening termed ‘cottage gardening’ (as opposed to formal gardening), it would
be advisable to find a book or two on this style of gardening. Cottage gardening
is a mixture of plants that are planted together with special attention paid
to their bloom time, colors, height, and form. It is in this atmosphere that
antique roses stand out and perform their best. When it comes time to find that
special rose for that special place, search out nurseries that can offer a variety
to choose from and the knowledge to find the rose that will work for you. To
discuss all the classes of roses or to list this rose or that rose would take
away from all that could not be listed. Some are common and some are hard to
find. But with a little studying and some searching you should be able to find
the rose that will make that special place stand out!
You will find that Dr. William C. Welch has two books that are indispensable in the learning of cottage gardening and old roses. He lives here in South Central Texas and writes beautiful and informative books. Look for Perennial Garden Color and Antique Roses for the South. Another Texan, Liz Druitt, has a book titled The Organic Rose Garden on how to grow your roses following organic gardening principles. For those on the internet, check out the Texas Rose Rustlers Website at www.texas-rose-rustlers.com.