Beds
of Roses
It is useless to stick a rose
tree into any sort of bed or border, without first ascertaining whether the soil is good, and the conformation
likely to please.
The lines of beds of roses
should be bold, niggling curves and twists with no meaning in them should be avoided, as should long narrow beds
so often seen. A good square or oblong shape looks good, ovals and crescents also look well under certain
circumstances. Round beds of roses and stars look less dignified, and are difficult to set out
successfully.
How to form
them
If the beds are cut out on a
lawn, see that the soil is not raised too high.
This is a common fault, and
the cause of many failures. The rain runs off too soon, and no
amount of artificial watering will properly moisten the roots when the soil is raised unduly.
Standards on
lawns
Rose Standards too often
look like broomsticks, whereas if they were planted in groups of three, the effect would be more relaxed.
Holes must be dug for them, and the grass kept well away from the trees.
Each tree if planted singly
should have a hole as large across as an ordinary wash-hand basin, and about eighteen
inches or two feet deep. There is no need for the soil around to be quite bare,
various ways of treating it will be found in the section headed Ground Cover Plants.
Roses in
borders
Roses often look their best in borders. Backed by an old wall, with various climbing plants, including varieties
of the rose itself, growing up it, and with a pretty edging between them and the gravel path, there is something
old-world and informal about these borders that is sure to charm the eye.
They must be arranged with
care, however, or the good effect will be lost.
Avoid straight
lines
Many gardeners can plant a
bed out in the open well enough, but when they come to a border nothing will content them but rows of straight
lines! We cannot do better than learn more from Nature, she never goes wrong, and always abhors a straight
line. Of course a garden is not intended to be wild, and a few
formal lines have their proper place in landscape gardening.
The best
soil
The best soil for roses is
composed of two-thirds loam and one-third manure, the whole being well mixed and stamped down so as to be fairly
firm, with the manure not too near the surface unless it is very well decayed. The depth of good soil should be at least a foot and a half, or a little more, if possible.
If it is resting on clay so much the better.
Preparing beds and borders
in wet weather should not be attempted. The soil should be
fairly crumbly, if it is sticky delay the matter for a few days.
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