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Roses are generally regarded as full sun plants, and they aren’t considered for shade gardens. But even your garden doesn’t get the recommended 6 to 8 hours of full sun, you may still be able to grow select varieties. There are some rose varieties that will grow in shade.
If you’re looking for a beautiful addition to your shady area, then here is our list of 10 great roses for shady spots. Also, learn the requirements and how to plant roses in your garden.
What You Need to Know Before Planting Roses in the Shade
There are a few different things that you can do to help roses grow in a shady area. One thing is to plant them near an evergreen hedge or tree so that it shades the rose bed during part of the day when the sunlight is less intense (but not all day). You can also plant them under taller bushes with dense foliage, but this won’t give much light during most of the year. Make sure you learn how to plant roses first thing before you proceed to anything else.
Rose leaf spot, powdery mildew, cane canker, and even rose leaf rust are all fungal infections, and they happen more frequently in humid less sunny places. Make sure the ventilation is good, and your flowering shrub will thank you with plenty of flowers. In fact, in some places like very hot countries, some rose varieties will give better blooms in fresh but ventilated partial shade places than in the full sun.
In addition, planting them next to other types of flowers that bloom at different times will provide more color than if they were planted alone without any companionship from other flowering plants. If possible, try locating your roses where there’s plenty of morning sunlight and then shade in the afternoons. This encourages blooming on new wood, which will provide you with many more flowers.
Now, here’s my list of great roses that can do well in partial shade :
Rose French Lace
Bring light and candor to your green spot in the shade with a floribunda rose variety from 1981, French Lace. This beauty has white double flowers with light pastel apricot shades and a bright yellow glow in the center. Each head is about 3 inches wide and has a classical tea rose shape. It also has a light fruity fragrance.
This elegant rose full of light is a winner of the All American Rose Selections Award and a perfect choice for a partial shade spot in full sight, even in formal settings. Soil requirements include well drained and fertile loam, clay, chalk, or sand-based soil pH from mildly acidic to mildly alkaline.
Fair Bianca (Rosa ‘Fair Bianca’)
Rose cultivator David Austin scored again with the Fair Bianca English rose also called Ausca. Fair Bianca has densely petaled pure white blooms with spicy scents and packs of all the great features of David Austin Roses, including pest resistance, cold hardiness, and heat tolerance. This partly shady garden rose plant blooms heavily in mid summer and then sporadically through fall. It thrives in full sun to part shade.
Rose Princes Alexandra of Kent
Princes Alexandra of Kent is a small to medium sized English shrub rose with a very traditional look and is very shade tolerant. The fully double flowers are bright pink and quite large, reaching four inches across. They have a strong light tea fragrance, and they come repeatedly for months. The plant has light green foliage and a very well proportioned round habit.
Princes Alexandra of Kent is named after a famous gardener with royal blood, and it’s ideal for smaller spaces like under your front door porch or on a terrace in partial shade. It’s ideal for containers. It can also do well in dappled shade, light shade, and full sun. Its blooming season starts from late spring till frost.
Rose Hansa
You can even a rose from the small rugosa group in your shady garden or terrace, and it’s called Hansa. Rugosa roses originate from South East Asia, and they have wrinkled leaves. They always have pink to purplish flowers, and Hansa has bright, deep magenta fully double blooms of large dimensions, up to four inches in diameter. Hansa is a small but vigorous heirloom variety from 1865.
It will adapt to large containers, and it’s ideal for natural-looking gardens in partial shade. It’s also quite hardy, so perfect if you live in a cold place like Canada. Other light exposures include dappled shade, light shade, or full sun and the soil requirements range from well drained and fertile loam and clay, chalk, or sand based soil with pH from mildly acidic to mildly alkaline.
Ballerina Rose
This rose is the perfect choice for your shady spot. Dainty, light petaled blooms of pink and white grow in clusters on this beloved hybrid musk shrub from 1937. This variety is praised for its disease resistance, strong fragrance, and shade tolerance. Its small size means it can be grown in containers too.
Hybrid Tea Roses are normally medium to large roses that will grow between 4-6 feet tall or more. This type of rose usually blooms once in early summer and then sporadically until the end of fall. The plant will also produce hips after the flowers have fallen. It can also be trained as a beautiful small climber.
Ballerina is really exceptional in partial shade, filling it with its blooms as if in full sun. No wonder it has won the Award of Garden Merit by the Royal Horticultural Society. It also does well in dappled shade, light shade, or full sun.
New Dawn Rose
Beautiful, diseases resistant, and fragrant, New Dawn is a near-perfect rose. It was inducted into the World Federation of Rose Society Hall of Fame in 1997. The double pink, fragrant flowers fade to soft pink and stay attractive for a long season. Expect New Dawn to bloom in the spring and again in the late summer. It can be grown as a shrub, or climbing rose.
Red Knock Out Rose
This 2000 All-America Rose Selection Winner and 2004 American Rose Member’s Choice winner is a great shade tolerant rose. This Knock out Rose, also known as Radrazz, is incredibly disease resistant and easy growing. It’s also drought tolerant, surviving and even thriving in the most devastating of dry summers and most humid summers.
It’s highly resistant to black spots. The cycle of bloom and growth is never-ending and shows brightly colored cherry red blooms from early spring until frost. Sun exposure includes direct sun to part shade.
Golden Showers’Rose
Considered a modern climber, Golden Showers was named All American Rose Selection Winner in 1957. Its name comes from the bright yellow blooms that seem to flower continuously. With honey-like fragrance, the blossoms make excellent cut flowers. Golden showers look equally nice against walls or structures. It does well in full sun to part shade.
Rose Malvern Hills
What about a medium-sized rambling English rose for that spot that lacks light in your garden? This English rose will charm you with its soft yellow blooms that go from capped to flat rosette shaped as they open. These are in large and soft looking clusters with a medium slightly fragrance.
They have very strong and healthy leaves, and the canes have very few thorns. This traditional looking rose with an equally natural-looking aroma is ideal for informal gardens with shady spots. Light exposure ranges from the partial shade, dappled shade, light shade, and full sun.
Rose Garden Unicorn
If you are looking for an English rose that’s free of thorns, then this is it. The pale pink double blooms open in May and June with few leaves. The fact that its flowers are small means that the overall effect isn’t overpowering. If you like your roses low growing, then Rose Garden Unicorn has got to be on your list.
This is an old rose garden variety with a better quality of yellow in partial shade than it does in full sun. This makes it shade loving rather than tolerant. A golden unicorn is a rose with a mysterious origin that can turn your poorly lit garden into a wonderfully original and decorative green space with gold spots over it. It also does well in dappled shade, light shade, or full sun.
Carefree Wonder Rose
Carefree wonder is a shrub rose that lives up to its name, adapting to almost any condition. While the blossoms are exceptional in appearance, the sheer quantity of flowers makes the bush a delight in any garden. Carefree wonder, also known as a Meipitac rose, is a repeat bloomer with single blooms of pink with white reverse.
Mary Rose
Dark pink buds open to full, paler pink rosettes with a soft honey fragrance. Mary Rose is a David Austin English and is a great repeat flowering, shade tolerant, disease resistant tolerant specimen. It makes a nice, bushy shrub with large 4 to 5 blooms.
Play Boy Rose
Glossy green foliage offsets the large orange-scarlet, semi double blooms. Playboy’s flowers pass through the shades of yellow and orange on their way to the deep red of fading blooms. The playboy has very good disease resistance.
FAQs on 10 Great Roses for Shady Gardens
How do you keep weeds out of your roses?
Weeds are very common in landscape situations, including around rose plantings. Mulching with two to four inches of organic material such as wood chips will reduce annual weeds and make hand weeding easier. Woven landscape fabrics placed under the organic mulch will provide weed control for several years. Also, learn how to prune roses to help them grow well.
Should you put compost around your rose?
Yes, if you know how to easily make compost, then go ahead and use a high quality garden compost, composted straw or bark, or well-rotted manure from a local farm. This will act as a mulching material and add nutrients to your soil. A well-rotted sawdust mulch is an excellent source of mulching material for roses if you have a local source.
Final Thought on Great Roses for Shady Gardens
As you can see, there are roses of different colors, sizes, growing habits, ramblers and bushes, old garden roses, floribunda cultivars, and classical English roses. These roses can grow to bring vibrant colors and even fragrance to that sad place in the shade at the back of your garden or terrace.
The post 10 Great Roses for Shady Gardens appeared first on Kitchen Infinity.
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