Rose Secrets
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Rose Secrets
We need to go back thousands of years into the history of cultivated roses.
According to fossil evidence, rose plants have existed for
approximately 35 million years. Wild roses are known to be hardy and adaptable plants which grow in
conditions ranging from swampy to arid and can therefore tolerate the extreme
climates of the northern hemisphere.
It is said that domestic cultivation of roses began more than 5,000 years ago in
China. . Many of the Rose Secrets also include that they
were cultivated extensively in the Middle East during Roman
times, their petals used as confetti at celebrations, for
medicinal purposes and perfume. Roman nobles kept large public rose gardens in
the south of Rome, where they used hot-houses to "force" roses into
bloom at desired times, and they also imported roses from Egypt.
European roses are mainly classified as Albas, Centifolias, Damasks,
Damask Perpetuals, Gallicas, and Mosses. The European varieties, with the
exception of the Damask Perpetuals, have only one season of bloom per
year, while the Orientals bloom more or less continuously. As most of us know, England is the country most associated with rose cultivation.
The damp, mild climate combined with the continually cloudy
weather produces the best color in roses, which tend to have
"bleached" colors in bright sunlight.
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SOME AMAZING FACTS ABOUT ROSE GARDENING AND WHY THIS MAY BE THE BEST ROSE GROWING METHOD IN 50 YEARS – MAYBE EVER!
Click here for more info!
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Roses feature extensively in British historical symbolism, and
many family coats of arms feature roses. In heraldry, the rose
is the symbol of the seventh son, hope and joy. A red rose
symbolizes grace and beauty while a white rose symbolizes hope and faith. During
the Middle Ages, roses were used in both public and religious
festivals, and were also kept in medicinal gardens.
The fifteenth century "War of the Roses" was so named because
the York and Lancaster factions were symbolized by white and red
roses respectively.
During the sixteenth century, roses and rose water were valued
so highly that they were used as barter for goods.
With the rise of mercantilism during the Renaissance,
horticultural commerce flourished. Due to their fleet of trading
ships, the Dutch were leaders in the trade of tulips, hyacinths,
carnations and of course roses.
The eighteenth century also saw a great advance in rose
cultivation, the widespread growing of roses from seed rather
than just the propagation of cuttings. The varieties of roses
available quickly expanded from just a few dozen to one or two
hundred. Also, a whole new group, the Centifolias, was created
by Dutch plant breeders. In the 1800's, Napoleon's wife
Josephine kept a large rose garden at Chateau de Malmaison, an estate seven
miles west of Paris.
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Wherever you see a large, spectacular flower show today,
know that they are
derived from cultivars introduced from China to Europe in the
eighteenth century. These plants were continuous bloomers,
making them unusual and of great value to plant hybridizers.
These roses were interbred with existing European roses to
produce plants with both hardiness and long flowering season.
During the 1830's, horticulturists experimented intensely with
interbreeding both Oriental and European roses. Due to the fact that
the trait of repeat-blooming is recessive, the first generation
of progeny between single-bloom and repeat-bloom roses are all
single-blooming.
By the 1840's numerous new
varieties had been created, called "Hybrid Perpetuals" for their
perpetual blooming. These cultivars came in all colors and
forms, were all at least somewhat re-blooming and hardy enough
to withstand the northern European climate. Interest in the
original varieties of roses waned, except as a sentimental
interest to heirloom rose fanciers. The gaudy new artificial
hybrids are now held up as the flower-show standard of what a
rose should look like.
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