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Hybrid Tea Floribunda Roses
Hybrid Tea Rose
The favourite rose for much of the history of modern roses, hybrid teas were initially created by hybridizing Hybrid Perpetuals with Tea roses in the late 1800s. "La France" created in 1867, is universally acknowledged as the first indication of a new class of roses.The flowers are well-formed with large, high-centered buds, and each flowering stem typically terminates in a single shapely bloom.
The hybrid tea class is important in being the first class of roses to include genes from the old Austrian brier rose "Rosa foetida". This resulted in an entirely new color range for roses.Shades of deep yellow, apricot, copper, orange, true scarlet, yellow bicolors, lavender, gray, and even brown were now possible.Hybrid teas became the single most popular class of garden rose of the 20th century today, their reputation as being more high maintenance than many other rose classes has led to a decline in hybrid tea popularity among gardeners and landscapers in favor of lower-maintenance "landscape" roses.
Floribunda Rose
Rose breeders quickly saw the value in crossing polyanthas with hybrid teas, to create roses that bloomed with the polyantha profusion, but with hybrid tea floral beauty and color range. In 1909, the first polyantha/hybrid tea cross, "Gruss an Aachen" was created, the new class named "Floribunda roses", Latin for "many-flowering."
Floribundas feature stiff shrubs, smaller and bushier than the average hybrid tea but less dense and sprawling than the average polyantha. The flowers are often smaller than hybrid teas but are carried in large sprays, giving a better floral effect in the garden. Floribundas are found in all hybrid tea colors and with the classic hybrid tea-shaped blossomHybrid Tea Rose Gardening Display
www.PerennialAndRoseGardening.net. This video was taken at a local gardener's landscape of hybrid tea, exhibition type roses. The roses shown are named and can be purchased at most exhibition online rose nurseries.
Hybrid Tea Floribunda Roses
Tahitian Moon
The Easy Elegancer Garden WallT Tahitian Moon rose, Rosa 'BAIoon' (PP16,994), is a hardy yellow shrub rose which is rare among shrub roses.The...
Trumpeter Rose
The Rose Trumpeter produces brilliant orange red blossoms that are lightly ruffled and bloom on a low rounded bush. This easy flowering Floribunda...
Yellow Submarine
The Easy Elegancer Garden Artr Yellow Submarine rose, Rosa 'BAIine' (PP16,659), has clusters of bright lemon-yellow blossoms that age to soft...
Season by Season
Autumn
Roses
- Continue deadheading roses which are generally still blooming as autumn commences.
- Prune rambling roses and weeping standard roses.
- Dig to prepare soil for new plantings.
- Continue to observe and treat disease appropriately.
- Take cuttings of all rose types except hybrid teas, which do not transplant satisfactory.
- Plant bare root roses although container grown roses can be planted at any time of year, autumn along with spring is a particularly good time.
- Tidy up rose beds hoeing mulch and collecting up and burning fallen leaves and debris.
- Prepare plants for winter cut back long stems to avoid damage by wind rock if your garden is very exposed.In particularly cold areas earth up stems with approximately 10cm (4 in) of soil.
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