Rose Hedges
Go to Nature
How much better we should
get on in the world if we all used our eyes a little more. Almost every one has seen rose hedges growing wild in uncultivated beauty
in the fields, and yet how rarely do we bring the idea into our own gardens! Given the right sorts, there is nothing much prettier than a
trained rose hedge of the sweetest flower that blooms.
The soil need not be altered
for them unless it is very bad, but just a little manure should be added.
How to start a rose
hedge
When we have chosen the spot
for our rose hedge, stakes should be placed at intervals and connected by galvanised iron wire, as this will
stand any weather, and though some roses do not like it, the hardy sorts, which
alone are suitable for a hedge, are quite unaffected by it.
If the roses are apart from
the rest of the garden, a path bounded on each side by a rose hedge makes a pleasant approach, and many of the
rose varieties really keep their leaves on so long that they make as good a screen as privet, and of course are a delightful change.
The best
sort
Taken all round the Evergreen Roses are the best for this purpose. Their growth is rampant, indeed you can almost see them grow, and the
foliage is of such a lovely color. All the new shoots, some
perhaps four or five feet in length, have stems that are almost crimson, and bronze leaves, and end with a most
fascinating finish, every top making a perfect spray for a vase. The thorns, too, add to their beauty, as they are large and hooked, it is
advisable, however, to be careful how we handle the branches.
These arch over in a most
attractive manner, much as the wild roses sprays hang, so that they show a pretty little oval of blue sky framed
by glossy leaves. There is a note on the pruning of the
Evergreen Roses in the Pruning your Roses
Section.
Suitable roses for
hedges:
Wretham Rose
Alba
Bonica
Cherry Meidiland
Fire
Meidiland
Mystic Meidiland
Pink Meidiland
Ruby Meidiland
White Meidiland
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