Showing posts with label Rose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rose. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Permaculture Plants: Rugosa Roses

The Rugosa Rose has a wonderful rose aroma

Common Name: Rugosa Rose, Japanese Rose
Scientific Name: Rosa rugosa
Family: Rosaceae

The large fruits of the Rosa rugosa... well, large compared to other roses.

Description:
The rose almost needs no description.  This species is a thorny shrub that can form dense thickets up to 6 feet (2 meters) tall.  Flowers are fragrant and are white to dark pink.  Rosa rugosa will produce fruits called rose hips which are 0.5 - 1.5 inches (1.25 - 3.8 cm) in diameter.

Rosa rugosa by Karen Klugein

History:
This rose is native to eastern Asia where it has been cultivated for about a thousand years.  It has been rather extensively introduced to Europe and North America.

Trivia:

  • Rosa rugosa is also called the beach tomato, sea tomato, saltspray rose, and beach rose - this is due to the large fruit (compared to other roses) and its salt-tolerance. 
  • It is highly resistant to common rose diseases (especially rose rust and rose black spot) and it hybridizes (cross-breeds) with other rose species well - this is why it is used by many rose breeders
  • Rose hips are very high in vitamin C

 Rosa rugosa in its natural environment (the beach) in one of its naturalized homes (New Hampshire)... although it can grow in just about any well-draining soil

USING THIS PLANT
Primary Uses:
  • Fragrance
  • Extract juice with a steam juice extractor
  • Fresh eating of hips and flowers
  • Preserves, jams, jellies, etc.
  • Herbal teas
  • Dried
  • Syrups
  • Cordials
  • Soups (a Scandinavian favorite)
  • Fruit leather
  • Rose Hip Candy

Secondary Uses:
  • Shelter to birds and small mammals
  • Fall and winter fruit for birds and small mammals
  • General nectar source for insects (especially bees)
  • Nectar source for hummingbirds
  • Hedge
  • Screen
  • Erosion control
  • Flowers can be used for perfumes and other fragrant uses (like pot-pourri)

Yield: 1 bushel (35 liters), up to 75 lbs, but it depends on the size you allow the thicket/hedge/bush to grow.
Harvesting: Late summer into autumn.  Pick anytime after the hips are fully colored.  Most people cut the hip in half, scoop out the seeds and hairs, and then process the fruit.  You can nibble the fruit off larger hips with Rosa rugosa - it is refreshingly tart.  Some will say that the best time to pick the hips is just after the first frost.  The flesh of the fruit will be soft and sticky and easier to process.  I have not tried this yet, so I do not know first hand.
Storage: Fresh hips will store for only a week or two

Rosa rugosa Rose Petal Jelly and Rose Hip Jelly

DESIGNING WITH THIS PLANT
USDA Hardiness Zone: 2-7 (all the way to 10 depending on which source you read)
AHS Heat Zone: 9-2
Chill Requirement: As this is a fruiting plant from a Temperate Climate, some chill likely increases yield, but I cannot find any research on this topic.

Plant Type: Shrub
Leaf Type: Deciduous
Forest Garden Use: Shrub
Cultivars/Varieties: Many available.

Pollination: Self-Pollinating/Self-Fertile, typically by bees
Flowering: Late spring to late summer and early autumn

Life Span: Can be almost perpetual if you allow the suckers to develop into a new plant

Rugosa roses turn a brilliant yellow in autumn.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THIS PLANT
Size: 4-6 feet (1.5-2 meters) tall and 4-8+ feet (1.5-2.5 meters) wide
Roots: Shallow, suckers will form and slowly spread outward
Growth Rate: Fast

Another beautiful variety, Rosa rugosa Regeliana
Notice the honey bees on the flowers

GROWING CONDITIONS FOR THIS PLANT
Light: Prefers full sun
Shade: Tolerates light shade (about 50%)
Moisture: Medium to Dry
pH: 5.1 – 7.0 (acid to neutral)

Special Considerations for Growing:
Tolerates juglone (natural growth inhibitor produced by Black Walnut and its relatives).  Obviously, the thousands of varieties have not all be studied for this, but it appears that at least the more “wild” or less developed roses are not inhibited by juglone.

Propagation:  
By seed, needs at least 16 weeks stratification for germination.
Can dig up and replant suckers in a new location.

Maintenance:
Minimal.  May have to remove suckers to keep plant from spreading, and occasional pruning of older stems will improve the appearance.

Concerns:
  • Can spread easily through suckering root system - thicket forming.
  • Can easily pop up and grow where not planted through seeds spread by birds and other small animals.


Rosa rugosa Blanc Double De Coubert... a beautiful variety






Monday, October 24, 2011

Permaculture Plants: Roses, an Introduction to Rose Types


Large-Flowered Climbing Rose: Graham Thomas Rose


I recently received this email from a reader:

Hi John, this isn't actually a temperate climate question, but I'd love to hear your thoughts anyways. I've just moved into a new home in Southern Turkey where the climate is similar to that of southern California. I'm hoping to experiment with some permaculture projects in my living space and want to start with what's already there. There is a large Bougainvillea bush ("paper flower") in the back yard and roses in the front yard. Do you have any insights from your reading about the benefits and uses of these two plants in particular and how they as ornamentals might fit into a permaculture system? 


In general, Roses are found all over the world.  There are native Roses from Asia, Europe, North America, and Africa.  Roses are a perfect topic for this blog.  The topic of Roses is really quite big, so I thought I would break it up in smaller, more digestible chunks.  I'll start off with a general introduction to the Rosa species, and then I will move on to more specific species and important aspects of Rose care that would be important for a Permaculturist and/or Homesteader.  So here goes...

Rambling Rose: American Pillar Rose


Common Name: Rose
Scientific NameRosa species…
Family: Rosaceae

There are over 100 species of roses in the world, and this number may be closer to 150, but botanists cannot decide, and there are thousands of varieties or cultivars of these species.

There are four major types of roses:


1. Climbing Roses: 
These roses don’t really climb, but they have long and flexible canes that can be trained and/or attached to fences, trellises, and other garden structures. (pictured above)
  • Large-Flowered Climbing Roses – thick canes, grow to 10 feet long, large flowers, blooms through the summer (repeat-blooming).  Many different flower bloom shapes and colors
  • Rambling Roses – thin canes, grow 20+ feet long, small flowers, bloom in early summer (once-blooming)

Shrub Rose: Zephirine Drouhin


2. Shrub Roses: 
Broad, upright shrub that grows 4 – 12 feet tall.  Most are very hardy.  There are both once-blooming and repeat-blooming species and varieties.
3. Groundcover Roses: 
As the name implies, these are low growing, prostrate, creeping roses.  There are both once-blooming and repeat-blooming species and varieties.
4. Bush Roses: 
Bush roses include the majority of roses in the world.  There are seven subtypes or subgroups of Bush Rose, and each subtype has dozens to hundreds of varieties of each.
  • Hybrid Tea Roses – narrow buds on a long stem, large many petaled flowers, repeat-blooming, 3-5 feet tall.
  • Polyantha Roses – very hardy, short bushes with small flowers in large clusters, repeat-blooming.
  • Floribunda Roses – developed from crossing hybrid tea roses with polyantha roses, very hardy, short bushes with medium-sized flowers in clusters, repeat-blooming
  • Grandiflora Roses – tall, narrow bush that grows to 5-6 feet, large flowers, long stems, clusters, repeat-blooming summer through autumn
  • Miniature Roses – very small and hardy bush with small leaves and flowers, repeat-blooming
  • Heritage or Old Roses – a very large group of roses grouped together because they were developed before 1867 (the date when the Hybrid Tea Rose was introduced).  Heritage Roses have a variety of forms in plant and flower.  Some are once-blooming, and some are repeat-blooming.  Some are hardy and some are not.  Many varieties of bloom shapes and colors.
    - Albas
    - Bourbons
    - Centifloras
    - China Roses
    - Damasks
    - Eglanteria
    - Gallicas
    - Mosses
    - Portlands
    - Etc
  • Tree or Standard Roses – This is more a style of rose than a specific variety.  If any rose is grafted onto a specially grown trunk (ranges from 1-6 feet tall), and formed into a “tree” shape, then it is considered a Tree Rose.

Bush Rose - Grandiflora: Wild Blue Yonder

Bush Rose - Miniature: Mixed variety

Heritage or Old Rose - Alba Rose: Unknown variety

Heritage or Old Rose - Bourbon: Louise Odier

Tree Rose: Weeping Pink


Landscape Roses
Another informal type of rose exists.  These are the Landscape Roses.  These roses have been developed to be easily cared for, very hardy, disease resistant, low maintenance, minimal pruning, and long, repeat blooming.  That is a lot going for them, for sure; however, they do lack the beauty, fragrance, history, and charm of the other more (and sometimes much more) demanding roses.  Examples include
  • Knockout – shrub rose
  • Carefree – shrub rose
  • Simplicity – shrub rose
  • Flower Carpet – groundcover rose
  • Blanket – groundcover rose
  • Bonica
  • Livin’ Easy – floribunda rose

Landscape Roses: Knockout Roses