
Low-Maintenance Plants That Return Year After Year
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I'm looking for the old, old rose that blooms continuously in clusters of 7 quarter sized blooms in various shades of pink. Very hard, very thorny!! Older people will say, "Oh, I had 1 of those...." but apparently it has fallen out of favor as I'm still looking for a source. Any help will be very appreciate. Many thanks. Jan
We have an old “wild” rose growing against the barn that people refer to as Scottish Briar Rose. It has very pale pink, quarter-size, prolific blooms, and smells heavenly. Could that be it?
I think it’s called seven sisters . My grandmother had several .
My mom and grandmother had some of the old fashioned roses. I think they were the rugosa rose. I got some and found that they sent up lots of shoots, so they were beginning to take over my area. It was difficult to get rid of them, but they were beautiful and smelled great! Hope this helps.
Hi Janet, Old heirloom roses which are “ramblers” have flowers in clusters of seven. Ramblers usually only flower once a year. “Climbers” come in clusters of five and flower repeatedly, so climbers have become more popular.
There is an interesting heirloom rambler called the “Seven Sisters” rose which is native to China. We wonder if this is the one you are referencing? Here’s a page that has more information.
Thank You very interested in flowers that return every year...deer resisting plants ☺️❤️
I love this article which encourages native plants but please remember that foxglove is not native to North America. It’s a very pretty plant and it’s done very well here (it’s naturalized that means it’s become wide-spread) which is why some people think it’s native but it’s from Europe and it’s highly toxic to dogs (and cats) and people. Please consider amending this article and/or run another article about plants that are pretty and easy to grow and sold in stores (like fox glove) but that should be avoided.
I just planted a pollinator garden of hollyhock (I love them), Sweet William and Day Lillies. I've not had great luck with coneflowers here. I suspect that side of the yard is too shady and damp for them. They tend to wander over toward the driveway, where they disappear. But common milkweed, loved by Monarchs, does great there.
a poster wrote: The plant grows big and beautiful but the buds just won't open. Any suggestions? Thanks. my comment: Make sure the Peonies Buds have Ants covered on them; the Ants have an enzyme which opens the Peonies buds; "no bug spray on Peonies";
This is true! Ants are important pollinators for many ephemeral flowers!