Dreaming of summer blooms? If you've been meaning to add a new rose to your garden this year, consider this your gentle ...
Bare-root perennial plant with exposed roots and green stems laid out on plastic packaging, showing the crown and root system before planting. - Michael Vi/Getty Images Bare-root perennial plants ...
Everything you need to know to create a beautiful potted rose garden.
I wrote a column on roses and now I am being inundated with offers for them. I am sure it has to do with AI. Why not?
Find out when to plant bare root roses in your USDA Hardiness Zone and get helpful planting and after-planting care tips.
Planting a rose bush at the right time makes it easier for it to get established.
February and early March are the perfect times to plant bare-root roses, the kind that come without soil on their roots and are packed in plastic or cardboard containers. Here are some tips and ...
With the soil slowly warming yet a lingering chill in the air, you still can add bare-root roses to your garden in March and April. Here's how to do it.
There’s still time to buy roses, fruit trees, hedging and perennials as bare root plants – which means they’re not as pretty when they arrive as they won’t be in flower, but given a bit of time to ...
Now is the time to buy and plant bare-root roses. For years, my favorite roses have included David Austin types because they are more like the old-fashioned roses with lots of smell and few disease ...
Bare-root perennial plants often intimidate container gardeners because they arrive looking fragile or sometimes even dead, but it's actually not a bad thing. They are dormant plants sold without soil ...