ROSES IN THE SOUTHERN GARDEN
Rosa 'Veilchenblau' ('Blue-Violet') blooms on an arbor |
The roses
are blooming in Traveler’s Joy*. Every
year I suspect them of tarrying, but when I check bloom dates for previous years
in my Garden Log, they’re always flowering on schedule. Peak bloom time for these beauties is the
third and fourth week of May, coinciding with my mother’s birthday and with the
first whiff of honeysuckle spilling out of the woods on our eastern boundary. It’s my own impatience that deceives me – impatience
that’s forgotten once I am fully engulfed by fragrant, downy, damask-petaled
perfection.
Not all
roses are created equal, as every gardener who has struggled with thrips and
blackspot knows. Over the years I’ve
documented the performances as well as the bloom dates of many plants in my
Carolina gardens, with especially keen observation being directed at roses, considering
how much care they require and how prominently they feature in the
landscape. Since 1996 I’ve been evaluating
rose types and cultivars for resistance to blackspot, thrips and Japanese beetles. With my nascent awareness of better
environmental practices developing as I gardened and learned, I also began grading
roses for their hardiness in our heat zone and their ability to stay healthy
with only an occasional spritz of insecticidal soap.
Those varieties whose blooms are transformed
into beetle-coated lollipops every June, or who languish in fragile health lacking
massive infusions of pesticides, have been exiled. That includes a small purple-flowered hybrid
I couldn’t resist (but should have), called ‘Midnight Blue,’ virtually all
modern teas, and most of the so-called ‘English roses’ which are no doubt
ravishing in British gardens, where summers are cooler and winters milder than
in the continental U.S. and where the soil pH tends to be higher than in our
acidic Carolina clay, but which struggle in our long southern seasons of brutal
heat and high humidity that have more in common with Kowloon than Cornwall.
The fragrant climbing rose, R. 'Celestine Forestier' is a noisette rose. Noisettes originated in Charleston, S.C. |
What I’ve
discovered over the years of tending, treating and admiring roses – and you’re
going to wonder how anyone could be so dull-witted when the obvious truth was staring
her right in the face – is that those roses which perform most reliably in my South
Carolina garden are those that have been growing successfully in southern
gardens for generations. Noisettes, for
instance, those heat-loving climbers with blooms like frilly petticoats,
originated in Charleston in the early 19th century, and the noisette rose ‘Celestine
Forestier’ which I planted three years ago in my garden on Kent* Street has
grown vigorously on my fence with little fuss.
From l to r: Ninebark 'Coppertina,' R. 'Veilchenblau' & R. 'Mme. Alfred Carriere' |
R. ‘Madame
Alfred Carriere’ is a divinely fragrant and vigorous noisette climber whose
pale, blush-colored flowers are the first to open in my garden. I am training that rose on an arbor, not
having a 17th century stone wall for it to clamber on, as the
specimen at Sissinghurst does. (On that
subject, my husband is so tired of hearing me say “one just like that grows at
Sissinghurst” that he has banned the ‘S’ word from conversation, along with the
other ‘S’ word – “Sackville-West.” This
is how gardeners bore the bleep out of their non-gardening spouses…)
It rubs
shoulders with ‘Veilchenblau,’ the blue-violet rambler initially brought to
Texas by German settlers, which I grow in a sunny, well-drained bed designated
specifically for roses and iris. ‘Veilchenblau’
strikes an intensely romantic note in the May garden, its profusion of bloom
clusters opening to bright cerise flowers that gradually fade to the color of
old denim. You must bury your face in
the flowers to detect the scent (something I’m not ashamed to do), which evokes
clean linen drying on a line.
Through my
log notes I also determined that those roses which do best are own-root roses,
meaning roses propagated from cuttings rather than those which have been
grafted on to rootstocks. It’s been convenient
living within an hour’s drive of Laurens, where the own-root nursery Roses
Unlimited is located. This mail-order
nursery holds Open Houses for the public in April and May. When I was developing this garden I made the
pilgrimage there several times to pick up gallon-sized plants of old favorites
I left behind in my last garden, as well as new varieties I wanted to try.
R. palustris scandens, the swamp rose, is worth the space it requires. Use it to bring color and architectural interest to a damp spot |
The native
swamp rose, Rosa palustris scandens, with
its bright pink single flowers, was one of the species roses I had enjoyed
before and needed to have back in my life.
Its fountain-shaped habit of arching branches is favored by birds who
like to swing up and down while waiting their turns at the birdbath.
Another
favorite is R. ‘Buff Beauty,’ a vintage musk rose. This floriferous pillar is slowly climbing the
arbor that shades the gate to my vegetable garden, where it mingles with the
black muscadine grapevine ‘Noble.’ ‘Buff Beauty’ displays blossoms of rich apricot
gradually fading to honey. The flowers
have a splendid citrus fragrance.
R. 'Buff Beauty' is richly fragrant. |
On my last
trip to R.U. I also bought an old-fashioned hybrid perpetual, another Frenchman
to keep company with Mme. Carriere. Since
R. ‘Souvenir du Docteur Jamain’ is reportedly tolerant of shade, I sited it in
the raised southern bed, which is partially shaded by a mature dogwood in
summer. (This rose also grows in the ‘S’
garden across the pond, where it was a favorite of the ‘S’ woman, whose name I
may not utter aloud.) It’s still early
days, but after two years in the ground the doctor dazzled us this month with
voluptuous, claret-colored flowers. The
cabbage roses are the texture of crushed velvet, with swoon-inducing perfume. With a companion planting of airy evening
primrose growing at its feet, this rose is a stunner.
R. 'Souvenir du Dr. Jamain' is a stunner. |
I’ve
experimented with a variety of organic fertilizers for my roses, because they
are heavy feeders in any soil. I think
I’ve finally stumbled on a keeper, originally recommended by Paul Zimmerman,
the writer, rosarian and former owner of an excellent rose nursery in Landrum,
S.C., that has since closed. Zimmerman
sold a line of roses developed by British rosarian Peter Beale, who also
produces an organic line of rose mixes. It
wasn’t until I walked into a garden store in February and saw a bag of the P.B.
Good Day Roses rose food formula for spring and summer that I decided to give
it a try. The results this May have been
extraordinary – I’ve been treated to frothy masses of bloom, with shrubs that
formerly wore a tasteful modicum of flowers now decked out like parade floats. This fertile
mixture of chicken manure, worm castings, cottonseed meal and other ingredients
is distributed by Organic Plant Health right here in the Carolinas.
The old polyantha rose, R. 'Perle d'Or,' thrives with very little care. |
While I’m
fond of all the plants in my garden, the roses present themselves to me as distinct
personalities. This is probably because so
many of them bear the names of real people, but I think it’s also due to the
fact that roses, like children, demand conscious and specialized nurturing, rewarding
their caregivers with a joy that can’t be quantified. I try to be level-headed about my attachment
to them, but I’m sometimes reminded uncomfortably of my dear mother’s
relationship with the hedge of leggy, nameless shrub roses that lined the path
to her front door.
R. 'Celestine Forestier' blooms a second time in the fall |
Near the end
of her stay in that house I was visiting M. J. with the motive of keeping her
increasingly disordered environment from spiraling out of control. Since I
could at least have an effect on the outdoors, I traveled there with my shears,
shovel and pruning saw, hacking away at the long grass and vines and cutting
back the low-hanging branches of trees that had gradually crowded together
until the rooms of the house were cast in permanent shadow. I tried repeatedly to prune the roses, whose
thorns tore at your clothes whenever you entered or exited the front door, but
Mommy always made an excuse for why that job could wait. Finally one day I asked her why she didn’t
want me to cut them back. She patted the
nearest one, thorns and all, saying, “They work so hard for me. I can’t bear to hurt them.”
A certain
amount of detachment is healthy, I remind myself – for the gardener as much as
for the roses. But who could be blamed
for favoring these beautiful belles of the mixed border? On a scented May morning, they’re all we have
eyes for.
###
Note: 4/6/14 -- since posting this entry I've learned that OPH, Organic Plant Health, abruptly closed down operations, and their line of plant foods are no longer available. I'm still trying to find a substitute, without much success. Please let me know with a 'Comment' if you can recommend an organic rose food that works for you.
Note: 4/6/14 -- since posting this entry I've learned that OPH, Organic Plant Health, abruptly closed down operations, and their line of plant foods are no longer available. I'm still trying to find a substitute, without much success. Please let me know with a 'Comment' if you can recommend an organic rose food that works for you.
RESOURCES
www.rosesunlimitedownroot.com This place outside Laurens is a bit hard to
find, so take a Google map along.
www.nationaltrust.org.uk/sissinghurst-castle I still dream of visiting this fabled English
garden, someday…
www.paulzimmermanroses.com Zimmerman offers expert advice on the care
and feeding of roses through the gardeners’ forum on his website.