People often don’t believe that I film in one chunk, never stopping or pausing. I don’t know what happened with this one my mind went literally as blank as a piece of paper never mind we can’t be perfect all the time.
I must thank you for your hard work. Your content is uplifting, inspiring and of great quality. Apart from the very useful information you deliver, I greatly appreciate your positive and constructive content in a troubled world. Thank you!
Another excellent video, thank you for all the great content & staying authentic. Forgetting a rose name only makes me like you more! Funny calling out gardeners stretching truths - kinda like me asking my patients if they've eaten their veggies or stopped smoking - they say yes but their bad lab levels & smoky smell can't lie! 😂
Your Gabriel Oak is so stunningly beautiful‼️I really love its deep color & I would love to smell its lovely fragrance‼️Thank you for another special video❣️🥰‼️ Debbie ~ Texas 🇺🇸
Thanks Ben, I never fail to be entertained, educated and have my spirits soothed by your videos. I especially like watching one at bedtime to help settle me for sleep with a smile. So good!
A wonderful collection ❤ I am especially impressed with Eustacia vye, it is so stable and its color is amazing. My most resistant rose is the wonderful, delightful, fragrant Venrosa, a Polish variety from 1980. I'll see if I can send it to you in the spring.
So informative and with lots of knowledge and expirience, thanks a mil! But, OMG, the visual of this review is just fantastic! The colours of those roses, your fern trees, fabulous stone wall, and color of the shirt, and you looking great:) All together is just beautifull ❤Lots of idea and work goes in makingsuch a high quality content. Much appreciated!
Thank you, I felt like I was chasing the daylight a little with this one, and I’m not sure if you can hear in the background but a newly fledged family of wrens like to sleep in my tree ferns, they were anxious to go to bed
I don't know what I love more, is it him and his delightful sharing of his experience or is it your comment and complete appreciation of it ❤️(agree, the shirt is super cool) 😁
We live in very rural, with mid-west Wales & experience repeated problems with fungal infections throughout the growing season. Blackspot on roses & rust on herbaceous perennials can get out of hand really quickly if not dealt with as a matter of urgency. Unfortunately, it's not always possible to spray immediately as the rain here can persist for many days even in a normal summer, allowing the fungal infections to really get a foothold. I have just 'gone back into roses' in a big way, after a gap of many years, & am over the moon to have found your RUclips channel. Thank you very much. ❤❤❤
Good luck with it. I hope that you find the video useful. I’m sure that you do but make sure that you’re clearing up any infected fallen leaves throughout the season and make sure you don’t put them into your Home compost bin. I’m a huge advocate for deep mulching to alleviate a lot of stress caused by heat, and of course, disciplined pruning regimes to allow lots of light, airflow and the reduction of harmful pathogens and spores if I can help further, don’t hesitate to ask
That’s something that I can look at filming for you next year, until then please do take a look at my around 3 feet tall. You can find it here on RUclips or over on my Instagram channel to watch at any time.
Thank you, I will go look for that video. I would also enjoy a video next summer for smaller space and container because you have a fabulous collection and knowledge. @@the_gardenerben
That's great Ben.Really.Didnt know the reason for morning v evening watering. Of all my potted roses only had one struggle with BS ...possibly Heidi klum .not the model alas ..but I am now adjusting its soil. Keep it up.
Looks like Tess has been retired, Ben. Would have loved those huge crimson blooms, thanks. Im actually 10 miles fr David Austin. The good news is Ive got 3 Emma Hamilton shrubs before she got retired. Ben, do you have Poet's Wife? It's one of my best performers & what a fragrance!!
They’re exceedingly beautiful. Thank you for this video. I’m designing my garden and the climate in Texas is not for the weak. I already have 2 Olivia’s and one Roald Dahl in my front garden bed. There’s a spot in between these and I was considering a yellow rose but Gabriel next to Olivia looks fantastic!
I was happy to see that I had already just bought three of the roses you featured in this video:). Nicely done and very helpful information for a first time David Austin rose grower.
Thanks Ben for your well put together content. I’ve recently bought my first 3 DA Roses which are all potted and all are doing really well. I have Bring me sunshine, Gabriel Oak and Boscobel. After watching your video I’ll be getting a few more from list of roses which are disease resistant. 💛
@@dianegolding3859 there’s already plenty of information available on the subject here on RUclips or you can find it on Instagram if that’s easy for you. I’ve lie very heavily on my mulch. I’ve conditioned my soil over the last six years to have everything my plants need you can also use david Austin ‘s slow release fertiliser or a liquid every two weeks once the plants have finished their first flush of flowers I prefer to use seeded extra from envii
Dear Ben, thanks for your video! My Scepter’d Isle (bought potted last year, now in a large plastic pot) is wrestling with mildew from almost the very beginning. She’s a rather weak/spindly specimen also. I tried watering better/more (thanks for the corresponding video of yours!) which helped for some time. Then she got mildew again and I sprayed a 1:8 milk/water mix which helped also for some time. Now, we’re back again with mildew... I guess that spraying should happen more often and regularly then to sustain the effect? Climate wise - she’s / we are ;-) based in Austria. She’s west-facing, getting 3-4hrs of direct sunlight and was mulched with compost earlier this year. Do you have any other ideas that could be helpful? Thank you and cheers, Agnes
Goodness that sounds like a frustrating situation. It is not normal for the rose that you have. Sceptred Isle is going to try and reach around 4 1/2 to 5 feet high. May I ask how large the container is that you’re growing in and whether you’ve placed a water retaining saucer underneath of it? If you follow on Instagram, please feel free to send me a direct message with a picture and I’ll more than happily. Have a look at it for you.
@@the_gardenerben => saucer! 🤦♀️ No, I did not have one under Scepter’d Isle (she stood on the lawn directly before and I did not think further than the excess water going into the ground... well... I immediately changed it after your reply 🙏). I then remembered you mentioning the saucer in a previous video 😅 (which I got for other roses as a result of it). I fear you’re absolutely right with the occurrence of human error in these things. ☺️ The pot size is somewhat too small (47x40cm) as this is her preliminary home until she can get in the ground (once the garden is finished) but I need to be able to move it by myself for now. Can the saucer actually do it’s job as it’s supposed to when I put expanded clay on the bottom 5cm of the pot? This was recommended to me by various employees in garden centres. I start questioning this setup now and maybe also the soil (50:50 compost/rose soil) I used. Emily Brontë is doing splendidly under the same conditions (I got her in the same shipment as a potted rose, same pot, same soil mix). Thank you for your kind help 🙏
Hi Ben. Your vids showed up on my page as i was searching for my next climbing rose. Looking for a deeper color since it will be in the back of my garden. Can you recommend one? Part shade, fragrant, produces rose-hips, disease-resistant, it wants it all 😅. Thanks Ben! I love that you show the actual roses in your presentation.
Hi Ben, thank you for your great videos, I really love them. :-) I would like to ask for your advice. I am looking for a pink rose to make a hedge in front of our small terraced house - so I would like her to be healthy, with lots of flowers and if possible, to start blooming early and bloom almost non-stop. I am now deciding between two varieties mentioned in this video - Olivia Rose Austin and Eustacia Vye. Which one do you think will make better hedge? Thank you. Maruška from Czech Republic. :-)
Hi Ben, Really love watching your videos and watching then alone makes me uplifted. I have gone through this video and the one for shades, Wondering if you have any suggestions for a newcomer of rose?
@@the_gardenerben Hi Ben, I am wondering if I should order Eustasia Vye or Bring me sunshine, or even other varieties, for a novice like me? Do you recommend a potted rose rather than a bare root ? Thank you.
@@siuyeah1398 both varieties are absolutely exceptional. It depends on how much space you have.Eustacia vye is relatively small around 3 to 3 1/2 feet and produces very large blooms suitable for cutting and bringing into the house Bring me sunshine is a powerhouse, but it is a big plant. I think mine will reach an excess of 7 to 8 feet this year, making it a little too large in my opinion to keep permanently in a pot, although it is currently in a pot.
As I say quite clearly in the video, if your plant is succumbing to some sort of issue, it doesn’t have the ability to tell you and miss truth. No Plants is going to ever be able to rebuff everything it is obviously in need of something whether it’s not getting enough water whether the soil is too poor or whether the weather conditions have simply been to extreme. Remember you’re the caretaker for your Plants it is our job is gardeners to give them what they need this selection put together by myself from the over 300 roses are great are in my opinion, the best for disease resistance.
How on earth can you Say that with all that's gong on in the world Extreme heat Extreme flooding Wild fires Extreme cold Mass natural disasters WAKE UP ! And educate yourself and get off my channel l've no time for people who believe the earth is flat
I've never seen you go blank before. It made me smile. I'm still highly impressed, you have such a talent for speaking and teaching
People often don’t believe that I film in one chunk, never stopping or pausing. I don’t know what happened with this one my mind went literally as blank as a piece of paper never mind we can’t be perfect all the time.
You're a Don Ben. I really appreciate your hard work bringing us your knowledge has really help me pick the right rose for my garden 🌹🥀🌹
lol even if I forget what I’m talking about 11 minutes in !
I must thank you for your hard work. Your content is uplifting, inspiring and of great quality. Apart from the very useful information you deliver, I greatly appreciate your positive and constructive content in a troubled world. Thank you!
Another excellent video, thank you for all the great content & staying authentic. Forgetting a rose name only makes me like you more! Funny calling out gardeners stretching truths - kinda like me asking my patients if they've eaten their veggies or stopped smoking - they say yes but their bad lab levels & smoky smell can't lie! 😂
Your Gabriel Oak is so stunningly beautiful‼️I really love its deep color & I would love to smell its lovely fragrance‼️Thank you for another special video❣️🥰‼️ Debbie ~ Texas 🇺🇸
Smell on this one is incredible
Thanks for all that advice and information Ben ❤
Thanks Ben, I never fail to be entertained, educated and have my spirits soothed by your videos. I especially like watching one at bedtime to help settle me for sleep with a smile. So good!
@@replicant70 thank you that’s so kind - keep your eyes peeled for my podcast
Eustacia Vye is beautiful
Traumhaft schöne Rosen 🌹 Die Elegante Blütenausdruck
Und leuchtende Farben, Faszinieren mich 😮
DANK!
I’m really glad that you enjoyed it
A wonderful collection ❤ I am especially impressed with Eustacia vye, it is so stable and its color is amazing. My most resistant rose is the wonderful, delightful, fragrant Venrosa, a Polish variety from 1980. I'll see if I can send it to you in the spring.
I adore it too
As you point out, we have to recognize the extreme weather as we plan our gardens. Whining won’t help. We have to be clever.
This was really helpful. Thank you!
Glad you think so
Like these presentations ver much.Thank you
Just one more to come for me this year on this subject the lawn and well overdue. New top 20 most recommended
So informative and with lots of knowledge and expirience, thanks a mil! But, OMG, the visual of this review is just fantastic! The colours of those roses, your fern trees, fabulous stone wall, and color of the shirt, and you looking great:) All together is just beautifull ❤Lots of idea and work goes in makingsuch a high quality content. Much appreciated!
Thank you, I felt like I was chasing the daylight a little with this one, and I’m not sure if you can hear in the background but a newly fledged family of wrens like to sleep in my tree ferns, they were anxious to go to bed
I don't know what I love more, is it him and his delightful sharing of his experience or is it your comment and complete appreciation of it ❤️(agree, the shirt is super cool) 😁
We live in very rural, with mid-west Wales & experience repeated problems with fungal infections throughout the growing season. Blackspot on roses & rust on herbaceous perennials can get out of hand really quickly if not dealt with as a matter of urgency. Unfortunately, it's not always possible to spray immediately as the rain here can persist for many days even in a normal summer, allowing the fungal infections to really get a foothold.
I have just 'gone back into roses' in a big way, after a gap of many years, & am over the moon to have found your RUclips channel. Thank you very much. ❤❤❤
Good luck with it. I hope that you find the video useful. I’m sure that you do but make sure that you’re clearing up any infected fallen leaves throughout the season and make sure you don’t put them into your Home compost bin. I’m a huge advocate for deep mulching to alleviate a lot of stress caused by heat, and of course, disciplined pruning regimes to allow lots of light, airflow and the reduction of harmful pathogens and spores if I can help further, don’t hesitate to ask
Wowwww all are looks amazing!!! Thanks for sharing with us!!!❤
The roses love the heat they Thrive on it via photosynthesis.
Thank you so much Ben! Appreciate all those point blank comments ! God Bless!
Great review! Funny that you forgot you last pics 😂, bur it definitely happens to all of us!
I don’t know anybody else that films in one continuous loop like me and never edits or alters any of their media
Beautiful collection 🍃🌹🍃
Thank you and I love the suspenseful twist at the end. So authentic. Keep up the great work.
thanks for your expertise...very helpful
Please do a best for small spaces DA roses. Thank you!
That’s something that I can look at filming for you next year, until then please do take a look at my around 3 feet tall. You can find it here on RUclips or over on my Instagram channel to watch at any time.
Thank you, I will go look for that video. I would also enjoy a video next summer for smaller space and container because you have a fabulous collection and knowledge. @@the_gardenerben
That's great Ben.Really.Didnt know the reason for morning v evening watering.
Of all my potted roses only had one struggle with BS ...possibly Heidi klum .not the model alas ..but I am now adjusting its soil.
Keep it up.
Looks like Tess has been retired, Ben. Would have loved those huge crimson blooms, thanks. Im actually 10 miles fr David Austin. The good news is Ive got 3 Emma Hamilton shrubs before she got retired. Ben, do you have Poet's Wife? It's one of my best performers & what a fragrance!!
I do have the poets wife yes
They’re exceedingly beautiful. Thank you for this video. I’m designing my garden and the climate in Texas is not for the weak. I already have 2 Olivia’s and one Roald Dahl in my front garden bed. There’s a spot in between these and I was considering a yellow rose but Gabriel next to Olivia looks fantastic!
@@Alejandro_C62 goodness no it’s not you all the disease resilience you can get best of luck with it
I was happy to see that I had already just bought three of the roses you featured in this video:). Nicely done and very helpful information for a first time David Austin rose grower.
Great which ones do you already have ?
Thanks Ben for your well put together content. I’ve recently bought my first 3 DA Roses which are all potted and all are doing really well. I have Bring me sunshine, Gabriel Oak and Boscobel. After watching your video I’ll be getting a few more from list of roses which are disease resistant. 💛
My pleasure, I’m glad you find the content useful. Please feel free to ask if there’s anything that I can assist you with
Прекрасный выбор.
I can see your face and think thats passion!
Thank you- it most certainly is
Do a video on rose that has very few thorn ,that can be manage in an easy manner
Feeding advice please. Love your vids.
@@dianegolding3859 there’s already plenty of information available on the subject here on RUclips or you can find it on Instagram if that’s easy for you. I’ve lie very heavily on my mulch. I’ve conditioned my soil over the last six years to have everything my plants need you can also use david Austin ‘s slow release fertiliser or a liquid every two weeks once the plants have finished their first flush of flowers I prefer to use seeded extra from envii
Dear Ben, thanks for your video!
My Scepter’d Isle (bought potted last year, now in a large plastic pot) is wrestling with mildew from almost the very beginning. She’s a rather weak/spindly specimen also. I tried watering better/more (thanks for the corresponding video of yours!) which helped for some time. Then she got mildew again and I sprayed a 1:8 milk/water mix which helped also for some time. Now, we’re back again with mildew... I guess that spraying should happen more often and regularly then to sustain the effect? Climate wise - she’s / we are ;-) based in Austria. She’s west-facing, getting 3-4hrs of direct sunlight and was mulched with compost earlier this year.
Do you have any other ideas that could be helpful? Thank you and cheers, Agnes
Goodness that sounds like a frustrating situation. It is not normal for the rose that you have. Sceptred Isle is going to try and reach around 4 1/2 to 5 feet high. May I ask how large the container is that you’re growing in and whether you’ve placed a water retaining saucer underneath of it? If you follow on Instagram, please feel free to send me a direct message with a picture and I’ll more than happily. Have a look at it for you.
@@the_gardenerben => saucer! 🤦♀️ No, I did not have one under Scepter’d Isle (she stood on the lawn directly before and I did not think further than the excess water going into the ground... well... I immediately changed it after your reply 🙏). I then remembered you mentioning the saucer in a previous video 😅 (which I got for other roses as a result of it). I fear you’re absolutely right with the occurrence of human error in these things. ☺️
The pot size is somewhat too small (47x40cm) as this is her preliminary home until she can get in the ground (once the garden is finished) but I need to be able to move it by myself for now.
Can the saucer actually do it’s job as it’s supposed to when I put expanded clay on the bottom 5cm of the pot? This was recommended to me by various employees in garden centres. I start questioning this setup now and maybe also the soil (50:50 compost/rose soil) I used. Emily Brontë is doing splendidly under the same conditions (I got her in the same shipment as a potted rose, same pot, same soil mix).
Thank you for your kind help 🙏
Any suggestion on good gloves tough enough to handle rose canes when pruning please?
I use the ones from henchman ladders
Hi Ben. Your vids showed up on my page as i was searching for my next climbing rose. Looking for a deeper color since it will be in the back of my garden. Can you recommend one? Part shade, fragrant, produces rose-hips, disease-resistant, it wants it all 😅. Thanks Ben! I love that you show the actual roses in your presentation.
Tess of the D’Urbervilles (Ausmove)is the best da have produced so far but it may not be available where you are
Hi Ben, thank you for your great videos, I really love them. :-) I would like to ask for your advice. I am looking for a pink rose to make a hedge in front of our small terraced house - so I would like her to be healthy, with lots of flowers and if possible, to start blooming early and bloom almost non-stop. I am now deciding between two varieties mentioned in this video - Olivia Rose Austin and Eustacia Vye. Which one do you think will make better hedge? Thank you. Maruška from Czech Republic. :-)
Hi Ben,
Really love watching your videos and watching then alone makes me uplifted. I have gone through this video and the one for shades, Wondering if you have any suggestions for a newcomer of rose?
Hi I’m glad that you enjoy them. What kind of suggestions would you like varieties to grow first or tips for rose care
@@the_gardenerben Hi Ben,
I am wondering if I should order Eustasia Vye or Bring me sunshine, or even other varieties, for a novice like me? Do you recommend a potted rose rather than a bare root ?
Thank you.
@@siuyeah1398 both varieties are absolutely exceptional. It depends on how much space you have.Eustacia vye is relatively small around 3 to 3 1/2 feet and produces very large blooms suitable for cutting and bringing into the house
Bring me sunshine is a powerhouse, but it is a big plant. I think mine will reach an excess of 7 to 8 feet this year, making it a little too large in my opinion to keep permanently in a pot, although it is currently in a pot.
@@siuyeah1398 tidd.ly/3w45UZw
@@siuyeah1398 tidd.ly/47SPqkd
Здравствуйте. Какие сорта подходят для дождливого климата, чтобы бутоны не смокли и выдержали дождь и не болели?
I planted around 20 David Austin roses. Wisely 2008 only one has black spot so not sure how they have disease resistance.
As I say quite clearly in the video, if your plant is succumbing to some sort of issue, it doesn’t have the ability to tell you and miss truth. No Plants is going to ever be able to rebuff everything it is obviously in need of something whether it’s not getting enough water whether the soil is too poor or whether the weather conditions have simply been to extreme. Remember you’re the caretaker for your Plants it is our job is gardeners to give them what they need this selection
put together by myself from the over 300 roses are great are in my opinion, the best for disease resistance.
Is 'Bring Me Sunshine' a lot darker yellow than 'Charlotte'? ... or would you say it is very close to the Bathsheba rose?
It’s a very strong yellow
I love my roses, but I’m thinking the rain we get in Summer is detrimental. It ruins the flowers and even rots the buds
@@sal8454 unfortunately sometimes it does yes
Oh, and I forgot to say going to going to peter beales Sunday hope to get my hand on mcmillian nurse fingers crossed 🤞
Have a great time
What disease resistant climbing roses would you recommend?
When you say climate change do you mean El Niño?
Ben climate change propaganda, you need to stop 🛑.
How on earth can you
Say that with all that's gong on in the world
Extreme heat
Extreme flooding
Wild fires
Extreme cold
Mass natural disasters WAKE UP ! And educate yourself and get off my channel l've no time for people who believe the earth is flat
You must be Republican 😂😂😂
@@the_gardenerben the Earth isn’t flat Benny .