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Healthier Growing Climbing Roses

No rose garden is truly complete without including climbing roses into the mix of rose species. Climbing roses, also known as pillars, ramblers, trailing roses, and everblooming roses depending on how they grow are not considered true vines. They don’t grow their own support structures to hold onto surfaces. But they are the [...]

Growing Climbing Roses

Rosa "Shinsetsu", a climbing rose. &...

Rosa "Shinsetsu", a climbing rose. "Shinsetsu"means fresh snow in Japanese. Created by :w:en:Seizo Suzuki in 1969. Image via Wikipedia

Growing climbing roses is actually not so hard. They are much like ordinary roses only that they can climb up and around the area in which they are planted. But, these types of roses do not actually grow like vines that can support their own; they would need outside forces to get them to do it.

These types of roses do not have their own support structures like other climbing plants, so they are not true climbing plants. These flowers may need a little extra attention, but with the right steps it can be a breeze. You don’t have to prune these for years either. You heard it, years.

Climbing roses go by many different names such as ramblers, ever-blooming roses, pillars, and trailing roses, but they all mean the same thing. They are a great addition for fences, archways, or anything else in and around your garden.

To put these roses on your structures you can wind or loosely attach them. They are popular to add to walls, arbors, pillars, sheds, trellises or other large, sturdy things. When laterally growing rather than vertically grown, they have a greater amount of blooms. Continue reading Growing Climbing Roses