Posted by admin | Posted in Flowers and plants database, Roses | Posted on 10-03-2010
Tags: cut rose, flowers for lovers, hybrid tea roses, large flowered roses, love flower, rosa

Bush roses are divided in two broad categories: Large-flowered or Hybrid Teas and cluster flowered or Floribundas. The only difference between these bush roses is the number and shape of the flowers: large-flowered roses have a single bloom on each stem (the classic rose for cutting), cluster flowered roses have several flowers on each stem.
Also known as hybrid tea roses, large flowered deciduous rose shrubs are commonly grown in formal bedding displays, laid out with neat paths and edging. They are distinguished from other roses in that they carry their large flowers singly. The first blooms appear in early summer and repeat flushes continue into early autumn. In a formal bed, group five or six of the same cultivar together, and interplant with some standard roses to add some variation in height. These bush roses also combine well with herbaceous perennials and other shrubs in mixed borders.
Choose from the roses below which roses shrub you want to plant in your home garden: Rosa Abbeyfield Rose ‘Cochrose’, Rosa Alexander ‘Harlex’, Rosa Blessings, Rosa Elina ‘Dicjana’, Rosa Freedom ‘Dicjem’, Rosa ‘Indian Summer’, Rosa ‘Ingrid Bergman’, Rosa Just Joey, Rosa Lovely Lady ‘Dicjubell’, Rosa Paul Shirville ‘Harqueterwife’, Rosa Peace ‘Madame A. Meilland’, Rosa Remember Me ‘Cocdestin’, Rosa Royal William ‘Korzaun’, Rosa Savoy Hotel ‘Harvintage’, Rosa Silver Jubilee, Rosa ‘Troika’.

How to grow Large-flowered bush roses
This type of roses grows in moist but well-drained, fertile soil in full sun. You have to cut spent flower stems back to the first leaf for repeat blooms. Prune main stems to about 25 cm (10 in) above ground level in early spring, and remove any dead or diseased wood as necessary at the base.
