many many many beautiful ones! I love orange the most, but my favorite by name is Abraham Lincoln and Don Juans--yes, I know they're red roses!
2006-09-29 07:37:00
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answer #1
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answered by Jen-Jen 6
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roses can b divided into 5 groups
Hybrid tea roses:These are tall, long-stemmed roses ideal for cutting--they're the Valentine's Day roses you see at the florist. The flowers are usually borne singly, one to a stem, rather than in clusters. In the garden they are often featured as single specimens or in a traditional rose cutting garden.
Floribundas:Developed during the last century, these roses have the large, showy blossoms of the hybrid teas, but bloom more freely, setting clusters of blossoms rather than a single bloom on a stem. Floribundas are versatile; an individual shrub will fit easily into almost any sunny border planting. However, they are perhaps most striking in mass plantings
Shrub roses:These roses have changed the way many people view roses. Shrub roses, especially when compared with traditional varieties, are impressive for many reasons: their natural disease-resistance, their willingness to grow in a variety of climates with a minimum of attention from the gardener, their compact growth habit (very little pruning required), not to mention the great beauty of their flowers, which are borne consistently over a very long season.
Ground Cover roses:These low growing roses casacade over walls or act as ground covers in a perennial garden. Most grow only 1 to 2 feet tall while spreading 3 to 4 feet wide. They look great at the edge of beds and in containers.
Climbers:Climbing roses produce long canes that can be trained to a trellis, fence, or other support. Grow them up and over an arching trellis to make a striking entryway; train them up a lattice to adorn a plain wall.
2006-09-29 07:59:05
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answer #2
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answered by pari 3
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Hot chocolate (NEW ROSE)
Awarded the accolade of novelty rose 2006, 'Hot Chocolate' is a unique colour. The buds starts off a rusty orange and opens to a rich velvety-brown. It's a floribunda variety with healthy, glossy, dark green foliage
Gertrude Jekyll (2006)
Shepherdess (2005)
The Shepherdess is named after a character in Sir Philip Sidney’s Arcadia, published in 1593
Over 700 varieties are grown by David Austin (Chelsea Flower Show winner)
There are several thousand varieties of roses and several hundred new ones are being added every year.
2006-09-29 20:22:08
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answer #3
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answered by Eco-Savvy 5
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Here is a small list.
Alba
Banksia
Bourbon
Centifolia
China
Damask
Eglantine
English Rose
Floribunda
Floribunda Climber
Gallica
Hybrid Bourbon
Hybrid China
Hybrid Musk
Hybrid Perpetual
Hybrid Tea
Hybrid Tea Climber
Large-Flowered Climber
Miniature
Miniature Climber
Moss
Musk
Noisette
Polyantha
Polyantha Climber
Portland (Damask Perpetual)
Rambler
Rugosa
Shrub
Species & Species Hybrid
Spinossissima
Tea
Tea & China Climber
Tea-Noisette
2006-09-29 07:43:32
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answer #4
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answered by prillville 4
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Some representative rose species:-
-Rosa canina - Dog Rose, Briar Bush
-Rosa dumalis - Glaucous Dog Rose
-Rosa eglanteria (syn. R. rubiginosa) - Eglantine, Sweet Brier
-Rosa gallica - Gallic Rose, French Rose
-Rosa gigantea (syn. R. x odorata gigantea)
-Rosa glauca (syn. R. rubrifolia) - Redleaf Rose
-Rosa laevigata (syn. R. sinica) - Cherokee Rose, Camellia Rose, Mardan Rose
-Rosa multiflora - Multiflora Rose
-Rosa persica (syn. Hulthemia persica, R. simplicifolia)
-Rosa roxburghii - Chestnut Rose, Burr Rose
-Rosa rugosa - Rugosa Rose, Japanese Rose
-Rosa stellata - Gooseberry Rose, Sacramento Rose
-Rosa virginiana (syn. R. lucida) - Virginia Rose
2006-10-03 05:43:34
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Many, here are a few:
Antique, climbing, tea, miniature, flora bunda, grandaflora, long stem, rosa Rugosa etc...
2006-09-29 07:32:22
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answer #6
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answered by Clarkie 6
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how foolish it is to gather knowledge about roses instead of getting closer to it, to feel it, to be one with it.
2006-09-29 07:47:03
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answer #7
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answered by HITS_ON_TARGET 2
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two
me n you
:D
2006-09-29 07:41:12
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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many............
2006-09-29 14:44:15
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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