I live a a small farm in rural Oklahoma and don’t venture out much. Normally I only see roses in catalogs. Seeing them on your farm shows what they’re really like. I depend on videos like this to help learn and of course shop! I bought 10 roses from High Country Roses in CO this morning. Had I watched this video first my order would have been slightly different. Thank you so much Jason!❤
High Country does a good job. The roses arrive small, but grow quickly. You'll likely be happy with your purchase. I've purchased around 50 roses from them the past couple years.
@@LighttheWick Oh my gosh! If you have bought around 50 from them I bet you have over 100 roses huh! Thank you for sharing your positive experience with High Country. They are awesome. My other addictions are conifers and Japanese maples. Conifer Kingdom and Mr. Maple are getting my $$$$ too lol!
@@LighttheWick Very impressive! Wish I was your neighbor, bet they love your place and the wonderful scent too. A drone video would be awesome when they’re in bloom.
Jason, it seems you've mentioned that you are in USDA zone 8 before. But that really surprised me this time, as I live in Dallas/ Ft. Worth area of Texas, and I'm in zone 8, too. The roses you grow are fascinating. If more people were exposed to them, their hardiness and amazing fragrances, I believe they would have them in their spaces. My 'Autumn Damask' was a paler pink, as you mentioned. Have you tried growing 'Mme Isaac Pereire'? The fragrance is like the Damask rose with raspberry. 'Maggie' is a Bourbon Rose with a very strong raspberry fragrance, too. It does get blackspot, but it is so worth growing none the less. It is an absolute joy to see your Old Garden Roses. Please keep featuring them. They are wonderful, Jason. You could talk for hours about these roses and not bore me, Jason..
Thanks so much. I really do hope it's the true autumn damask (if such a thing can even be said reliably!) I added Mme Isaac this year I think, but haven't seen it bloom yet.
Hi I'm little west of Fort Worth... I distilled rose water from Mme Isaac Perierre. I have a one year of Autumn Damask and another one,Kazanlik which I will use this year.
I am just south of DFW and have watched your programs for years. I have several Maggies. They're great. My favorite pink that I can't get enough of is floribunda Else Poulsen. Wondering if you have ever had it? I also have her parent Betty Prior. The china Archduke Charles is almost never out of bloom - I love the color changes, and all the chinas do well here. Very impresive for me is Climbing Pinkie. I'm considering Beverly (Eleganza) because I hear such wonderful things about her. Spice blooms prolifically on a beautifully shaped bush. These are just a few of my favorites. Loved the walk through your roses.
I don't mind these interesting videos being five hours long as long as there are TIME STAMPS. Too few youtubers use them. Time stamps are indispensible when trying to find certain information after a while from first watching the video. I often find myself trying to come back to pieces of content only to realise it's impossible.
I always enjoy your videos, having just two ground cover roses I was totally lost to your rose world. That being said I love Roses and love seeing yours, your gardens and videos. I’m amazed and impressed you knowing all their names. Thanks for sharing your love with Roses. 👍❤️😊
I' ve got Rose de Resht, Comte de Chambord, Charles de Mills, Konigen von Danemark and Peace in my garden in Poland ( zone 6b) and we have no problem with them.😀 Only Peace needs a small cover. Yesterday we had -18C and I'm sure everything will be ok😉
So important to have rose specialists who are passionate about what they do, and strive to keep some of the rarer historic roses in production. Just love your informative videos too.
Jason, Nice job. Love listening and learning from you. You are a wealth of knowledge. In fact, I saw your 'Distant Drums' rose and loved it so much that I bought one too. Thank you for always being so informative. You're a walking rose encyclopedia! What a pleasure learning so much.
Thank you very much. Really nice to sum up and learn some more about roses and their origins. A interesting thing about roses is that I started with the HT and GF, went over to DA roses and I am now fascinated by the old roses like Paul Neuron, Buff Beauty, Mme. Isaac Pereire, Comtesse de Noghera, Comte de Torres, Mme. Alfred Carrièrre, Mme Hector Leuillot among others, all of them stunning roses. I really enjoy your videos and your approach to what is important when growing roses. For that, thank you so much, Jason!
My favourite rose is the double delight. The pink/red/white colour is so pretty and the scent is beautiful and it has nice long stems and can be perfect for vases.
It really symbolizes happiness. A rose by any other name! Makes me excited about my Rugosa line. ha. Their special because of the beauty/color interest on a property.
Wonderful video! Thank you for you sharing your wealth of knowledge. I started rose gardening in May of 2023 and I've been 110% addicted to rose gardening ever since! In fact, my rose garden obsession is so bad, that everyone in my neighborhood is constantly asking me if my roses are for sale!! For me, my garden is my home away from home and I love each and every plant like they're my babies! ❤
I was very Impressed and look forward to your next "Video". Each time you show case "New Rose's 🌹🌹🌹, Varieties". I am amazed at how much I really don't know about all the "Many Types of Rose's 🌹 there are" Sincerely 🤠 Mr Severance, "The Cake 🍰🎂🥳🎉 Man "& "Xerocsapeing & Master Gardener ".
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm I forgot to mention, I got my seeds in the mail today!!! Perfect timing, will be using it for demo'ing winter sowing in our library's first garden club tomorrow!
Hi Jason Your videos are amazing. They really introduced me to the old roses world. I am Syrian, moved to the UK 13 years ago. I have Quatre season and Compte de chambord and I smelled Kazanlik in Peters Beales garde. None of these smell near the strength and perfumy nature of the damask rose in my country! Quatre season here has additional rasin smell mixed with the damask! and i agree it doesnot look like wjat you bought as autumn Damask. Your Autumn damask looks closer in rose colour and leaves to the repeating damask rose I bought in Damascus!
Thanks Khaled. A lot of these similar Damask relatives travel under different names, so I may never be sure of a true identity. Ancient Persia covered that whole region, and was, so far as I can tell, the introducer of the Damask roses into Egypt and Rome (from origins further east on the silk road, I'm told). Imagine how much history there must be in the cultivars still in Syria and surrounding areas!
Wow this video is very good and educational. As I live in Calgary and new to gardening, all you videos help me to grown my knowledge. This idea helps me to think which rose varieties fits in colder zone. Will you do one video for Canadian zone 3-4 roses?
I'm in 5b, but I have many of your roses. I have been trying to have at least 3 of most of the old garden roses. I just ordered two more albas. I have Felicite Parmentier and just ordered two Queen of Denmark and a third Madame Hardy from Corn Hill on your recommendation. They are lovely people. Thank you!
Great video Jason and love the recommendations - only because we clearly have much the same view on roses as I have all but 4 of those listed amongst my gardens. I grow Tuecany Superb as a climber and have the stems trained over the doorway of an outbuilding in a relatively sun-free part of the garden - it does incredibly well with the lax stems covered in flowers - great rose for a difficult site. Rose de Rescht I love as a garden display - of the Portland roses always think it has the best regular shape - always tidy but not great as a cut flower as all the petals drop at once! Comte de Chambord is my favourite for fragrance, Jacques Cartier for being tough as old boots and prolific. Again lovely choice of worthy roses.
I ordered a Therese Bugnet rose through Jackson & Perkins. I hope to see it bloom this year. It is my first and only rose purchase being in zone 5. I think that is what the charts say, but I don't believe them. It was mailed to me more than a month ago, bare root, and it was much too early. We still had our winter snow and frozen ground. Everyone here only plants on June first. I put it into a bucket of water for 24 hours and planted it in a pot. Now it is in the ground outside. It seems to not mind all the crazy Alaska weather such as below freezing night temperatures, rain and overcast, strong winds for days at a time and to top it off the thermometer on my balcony hit 90 degrees today. You asked for viewers to let you hear from them to ask what they would like you to feature. If you have my rose it would be nice to see how large it will become. Thank you.
Thank you once again for sharing your wealth of Rose knowledge. So welcome in zone 4 Northeastern Ontario where we just received a large delivery of snow. @ queen Elizabeth 19:02, is that a Dahlia in the background? Would you be able to share the name? I love the orange and dark foliage. ❤
I’ve read that Constance Spry is only once flowering, so while interesting as David Austin’s first release I’m leaning more towards its parent Belle Isis. If it doesn’t repeat flower I guess why not just grow the original gallica. Bit late to the party but loved seeing all these.
Great video Jason (as always)! I was just wondering where I could find a higher quality version of the rose 'family tree' you put up throughout the video, as I think it would be a fantastic reference in the burgeoning journey towards better identifying roses. Thanks again, and keep up the good work!
I did a whole video on it here: ruclips.net/video/1g0Dl7jap0o/видео.htmlsi=X7HCgM0m3teLl6Qd and there's a link in the description of that vid for a printed version from Redbubble
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Hey thanks mate :) i've been working through your (fantastic) series on varieties but i suppose that one was buried a bit deeper in the archives! appreciate all the good work you do, keep it up please :D
Where does the Lady Banks rose fit in? Is it a species rose, a botanical, a wild rose from China? I have 3 of the yellow variety and they are enormous monsters, fountains of yellow, octopuses. Prone to mildew unfortunately.
I adore Paul Neyron, one of mine favourite roses with Baron Girod de lAin, but I am in a big problems with his pruning, thinking of just let it grow option. Last year I planted Alfred Colomb another hybrid perpetual. How to prune this beauties? My Julia Child and Hot Cocoa are coming this week 😍. Big Purple is fantastic tea hybrid.I am so lucky that I bought it in my local nursery, but I am so stupid to let Mme Hardy run from stock before I bought her. And I've got Souvenir du dr Jamain 🤩. Jacques Cartier is another one of my favourites, compact, beautiful formed shrub and flowers. Thank you 🤩
Fantastic video showing bit of history of old roses to modern ones. Always enjoy to watch your videos. I hope you would like to include few more old roses like Lady banksiae lutea, Maréchal Niel, Madame Falcot and Devoniensis. Almost fifty percent of modern roses are descendants of Devoniensis. Greetings from India.
Wow! I'm a 50% representer with 3 of my 6 varieties.😂 Don Jaun, Olympiad, and Queen Elizabeth. Apparently Carabia, Lavender Angel Face, and Mr. Lincoln didn't measure up.🤣😁 I do plan on getting Portland, China, and David Austin, perhaps even a couple from some guy named Fraser I think. This was a great snippet of rose genealogy and history specific to your selection and I appreciate the list on your website.👌 The perfume roses are a particular interest for me, especially as the edible varieties do compliment the majority of my plants here. Very informative video Jason. Thank you.🤙
Jason, I have a few mature Ispahan roses. When you say the best time to prune them is after flowering, the issue I have with that is that they continue growing from the cut point and reach up to 8 ft by the end of summer. Should I keep pruning them back to the original cut? And should I then prune them again in early spring? I live near London, UK, to give you an idea of the climate. BTW, your videos provide a wealth of knowledge!
Thanks. I've seen that some of these can be difficult to keep at a reasonable size in a mild climate. Mine are still young enough that I'll have to leave room to update my recommendations in future years. The wood that grows, matures and hardens after your late-spring pruning is the primary flowering wood for the following year, so later pruning costs flowers. I'm going to try to prune once as hard as I need to, and then let it grow out - only taking back any stems that are so long or poorly supported that I think they'll be lost to winter wind damage anyway.
That’s a lot of beautiful roses 👍 My favourites are usually the semi doubles. My impression has been that’s a difficult category to define or that definitions vary. (I see it as a fuller flower than a single that still has a good sized center. something for me and something for the pollinators 😄) Seems like the best of both options. Do semi doubles have any popularity? Thanks for sharing
Hi Jason! Great fan of your! I love rose to my heart. Am living in Jamaica. I would really like your unsual rose, which makes my mouth watering. What's the procedure to deliver to Jamaican? Love your reply. Have a great day. Keep up your honesty🙏🙏❤️💯
Okay I appreciate your quick reply, indeed great customer service, I love that. You are a great and honest man! Thanks for all these great informations. You are making a difference. If I come to Canada will it be possible to purchase some rose seeds from you(directly) keep up the great 😃 job you are doing. Indeed I will continue to watch your program. God's blessings continue be be with you. 💯❤️❤️🙏
You mention that you think that one of the parents of Champneys Pink Cluster was maybe a multiflora. It was not a multiflora. Champneys Pink Cluster was bred by using Old Blush and the Musk rose, Rosa moschata. Also, on a side note, Blush Noisette and Champneys Pink Cluster are two distinct roses. Blush Noisette is a seedling of Champneys Pink Cluster and was sent over to France.
I just found your channel. Love it, just subscribed. Do you have any rose recommendations for small (and I mean small 😊), urban yards? We have downsized and my old favourites are just too big. Thank you!
Some breeding companies have smaller "patio" or "veranda" roses chosen to be more compact. I like Lavender Veranda by Kordes. Minis are a great option. I also did a video a while back on smaller roses for containers - they don't have to be in containers, of course, but I chose them for their manageable size: ruclips.net/video/ZpWIy-pOA4c/видео.htmlsi=9qliXsUqSNuj_7BM
Thank you very much! This VDO is excellent!!! I’m home gardener that looking for 4 seasons interest. Any of these roses produce a good rose hips? Thank you once again.
Thanks. Have a quick search of the rugosa roses and see if you like them. Fragrant, cold hardy, repeat blooming, some fall color as the leaves turn yellow, and massive hips.
I assume your 'zones' mentioned in this video are the Canadian version of what we use in the US? Can you point me to a place where I can compare US vs Can zone definitions. I'm doing some research on a zone category problem. Thanks Jason!
As a longtime avid rose grower (I've grown many varieties you show here) I appreciate your videos. The Old Garden Rose that always has a place in my garden no matter how times I move is Centifolia Variegata - Village Maid. Exquisite. I am moving again this year (in late Winter) and must transplant two 3-year old bushes with long graceful but very thorny canes that I know I can't cut now or I lose the blooms. I will be a challenge. Any suggestions?
Thanks. I generally don't trim back much at transplant if the plants aren't too large to handle. There may be a little die-back (transplant shock) but no big deal - let it play out and then prune later. I haven't added Village Maid to my collection yet, but it's on the wish list!
I have mme, de la Roche lambert.. the most beautiful fuschia colour i’ve ever seen.. now i want Grus an treplise.. what a beauty.. Trevor white has got it but out of stock.. i’ll wait, cos Peter Beale has it but prices are shocking .. not affordable.. no wonder he has everything in stock
It can be varietal, in which case there's nothing much to do except live with it or replace those roses. Other times is just for lack of sturdy growth - and your checklist to improve growth: full sun, decent soil, regular watering, judicious pruning (thinning especially) and feeding as needed.
Thank you again for sharing. Would you please tell us how tall is your Old Blush rose? I'm surprised that it was listed as 3m/9ft because the typical China roses are not that tall...
Mine is still quite young, so at this point I'm basing the height figure on Helpmefind. I know it's been used as a hedge in places, so I assume it can be managed to a reasonable height with regular pruning
I’m from Puerto Rico and when I was a little girl my mom would use a rose call Rosas de cien hojas, rose of hundreds pedals. I have tried to find but can’t find it. Any suggestions?
Jason! I heard you say on a past video that you don’t sell roses outside of your area, is that still standing? If not sending to Ontario would you let me know were I can buy some of these roses?
We'll be listing smaller liner-sized roses for shipping across Canada in February on www.fraservalleyrosefarm.com Otherwise, for Ontario, you might consider Palatine.
Jason i’d planted all 31 bareroot roses in big pots from 20th October-19th December & they’d started to shoot away .. now that -6 hit degrees them they’ve totally shrivelled up ..the shoots.. i hope they’ll get normal..i’m worried ..
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm they’re nice & green stems .. i saw them with just one eye open then saw the green 8 inch branches & thought.. there is a chance of them surviving.. thank you Jason.. 1 vendor’s got them all at half price just when it’s impossible to plant them or go out in to the garden now.. gives you flu & shakes if you venture out there
Depends on the rose and the "hardness" of the freeze. Most will withstand a few degrees below freezing for a short duration, but may suffer some die-back if they get a longer or deeper cold while in active growth
You made me wanna get at least 1 from each variety’s family 😂 also I would like to know which roses usually are eatable? I know some Chinese roses are. How about other varieties that we can easily get from the nursery?
Thanks. All rose petals are edible, though opinions vary about which ones are the nicest flavor. Usually you'll nip off the white base of the petals because it's a little bitter.
Beautiful roses!!! By the way, do you have problem with thrips? I live in Malaysia, hot, humid & wet. I have to spray my roses with organic insecticide at least once a week, otherwise my roses will be attacked by thrips and I don’t have beautiful blooms & the leaves looked burnt..😢
The zone hardiness works like this: a zone 3 rose is hardy enough for zones as low as 3 (down to -40 degrees) and that makes it plenty hardy to survive milder climates like mine. You can always read cold hardiness zone rating on a plant like "zone x or higher".
Hi Jason, surprised you didn't include hardy rugosas in this video or the fertile species itself for its strong and unique clove fragrance. Keep in mind that crossing rugosas with tender varieties is bound to compromise cane hardiness in the offspring; Rugelda is an example. Crossing rugosas with r. chinensis was a 10 year futile endeavour that was dropped by Svejda for good reason. r. kordesii isn't cane hardy in the Ottawa area, suffering dieback above the snowline. It originates from a country (Germany) with a coastal climate far removed from the freezing rain received by the Nation's capital; the reason it was used in greenhouse breeding by Felicitas Svejda in her creation of the Agriculture Canada roses. Rosa kordessi may be an excellent seed parent but requires winter protection for outdoor plantation when it comes to harsh winter climates. Given that you're growing roses on the temperate coast, it all comes down to what zone and climate you're actually breeding for.
Thanks Mickey. I do have quite a few rugosas in the collection - not left off intentionally, but more just a sideline topic that I didn't have footage for at the time of editing
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm When time permits, it would be nice indeed if you could make a video of the rugosa and/or hybrid rugosa cultivars in your collection. I'd love to see them. 🌹
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Do you have any videos posted on sourcing the old fashioned & out-of-patent roses you feature! I'd love to have some resources for roses I can propagate for my flower farm & my nursery. I do have Hot Cocoa & read that it's out of patent now. Is it OK to prop DA roses if they're out of patent? I'm in the US. Thank you!
Still changing. 'Daybreaker' blew me away with constant gorgeous blooms this year. 'Sydonie' has impressed me a lot with flower form and overall garden shape (but it's a young plant, so the jury is still out). 'Buff Beauty' might take #1. Far too many runners up to start listing them.
You are enabling my rose addiction, sir. 😅
Lol
This was so educational. Please more about the breeding. Watched it twice. Fascinating. Many thanks.
I live a a small farm in rural Oklahoma and don’t venture out much. Normally I only see roses in catalogs. Seeing them on your farm shows what they’re really like. I depend on videos like this to help learn and of course shop! I bought 10 roses from High Country Roses in CO this morning. Had I watched this video first my order would have been slightly different. Thank you so much Jason!❤
High Country does a good job. The roses arrive small, but grow quickly. You'll likely be happy with your purchase. I've purchased around 50 roses from them the past couple years.
@@LighttheWick
Oh my gosh! If you have bought around 50 from them I bet you have over 100 roses huh! Thank you for sharing your positive experience with High Country. They are awesome. My other addictions are conifers and Japanese maples. Conifer Kingdom and Mr. Maple are getting my $$$$ too lol!
@@cindyl3916 I believe I have somewhere between 170 and 200 right now.
@@LighttheWick
Very impressive! Wish I was your neighbor, bet they love your place and the wonderful scent too. A drone video would be awesome when they’re in bloom.
I'm so glad you found it helpful!
Jason, it seems you've mentioned that you are in USDA zone 8 before. But that really surprised me this time, as I live in Dallas/ Ft. Worth area of Texas, and I'm in zone 8, too.
The roses you grow are fascinating. If more people were exposed to them, their hardiness and amazing fragrances, I believe they would have them in their spaces.
My 'Autumn Damask' was a paler pink, as you mentioned.
Have you tried growing 'Mme Isaac Pereire'? The fragrance is like the Damask rose with raspberry.
'Maggie' is a Bourbon Rose with a very strong raspberry fragrance, too. It does get blackspot, but it is so worth growing none the less.
It is an absolute joy to see your Old Garden Roses. Please keep featuring them. They are wonderful, Jason.
You could talk for hours about these roses and not bore me, Jason..
Thanks so much. I really do hope it's the true autumn damask (if such a thing can even be said reliably!) I added Mme Isaac this year I think, but haven't seen it bloom yet.
@FraserValleyRoseFarm You WILL LOVE IT. It's quartered, deep coral pink and smells WONDERFUL. They call it a pegging rose, which I think is perfect.
Hi I'm little west of Fort Worth... I distilled rose water from Mme Isaac Perierre. I have a one year of Autumn Damask and another one,Kazanlik which I will use this year.
I am just south of DFW and have watched your programs for years.
I have several Maggies. They're great.
My favorite pink that I can't get enough of is floribunda Else Poulsen. Wondering if you have ever had it? I also have her parent Betty Prior.
The china Archduke Charles is almost never out of bloom - I love the color changes, and all the chinas do well here.
Very impresive for me is Climbing Pinkie.
I'm considering Beverly (Eleganza) because I hear such wonderful things about her.
Spice blooms prolifically on a beautifully shaped bush.
These are just a few of my favorites. Loved the walk through your roses.
The longer the better Jason
I thought there might be a couple of votes for longer!
oh yes. In depth rose videos of hour+, every week please!. I'd love that. Anatomy and biology of roses. @@FraserValleyRoseFarm
I don't mind these interesting videos being five hours long as long as there are TIME STAMPS. Too few youtubers use them. Time stamps are indispensible when trying to find certain information after a while from first watching the video. I often find myself trying to come back to pieces of content only to realise it's impossible.
Yep
I need a bigger garden ... a much bigger garden. So many gorgeous roses! And so much knowledge here too. Thank you.
Definitely so interested in the history and minutiae of roses. Thanks for the link!
I always enjoy your videos, having just two ground cover roses I was totally lost to your rose world. That being said I love Roses and love seeing yours, your gardens and videos. I’m amazed and impressed you knowing all their names. Thanks for sharing your love with Roses. 👍❤️😊
I' ve got Rose de Resht, Comte de Chambord, Charles de Mills, Konigen von Danemark and Peace in my garden in Poland ( zone 6b) and we have no problem with them.😀 Only Peace needs a small cover. Yesterday we had -18C and I'm sure everything will be ok😉
So important to have rose specialists who are passionate about what they do, and strive to keep some of the rarer historic roses in production. Just love your informative videos too.
Thanks so much Laurel!
Jason, Nice job. Love listening and learning from you. You are a wealth of knowledge. In fact, I saw your 'Distant Drums' rose and loved it so much that I bought one too. Thank you for always being so informative. You're a walking rose encyclopedia! What a pleasure learning so much.
Thanks so much for the encouragement and feedback
Thank you, Jason. My favourite video to date 😊
Spectacular tour with pretty blooms and their pedigrees! Thank you so much!!
A rose that I planted last spring that blew me away was coral miracle. It was a blooming machine and so easy to care for. Thank you for sharing.
Thanks for sharing your pick!
I bought this from Costco the other day lol she’s doing very well.
Man I love this channel, always looking forward to new vids , keep on giving
Thanks so much for the encouragement and feedback!
Wonderfull to be surrounded by such lovely flowers!
Beautiful roses! And, a great video! More like this, please!
Jason, I always enjoy all of your videos and they’re always so informative.
You have a beautiful collection of r oses,I have loved growing old world r oses they have so much personal charm many thanks.
Truly fantastic video. The combo of history and pictures was just fabulous. Thank you!
Thanks so much!
Thank you very much. Really nice to sum up and learn some more about roses and their origins. A interesting thing about roses is that I started with the HT and GF, went over to DA roses and I am now fascinated by the old roses like Paul Neuron, Buff Beauty, Mme. Isaac Pereire, Comtesse de Noghera, Comte de Torres, Mme. Alfred Carrièrre, Mme Hector Leuillot among others, all of them stunning roses. I really enjoy your videos and your approach to what is important when growing roses. For that, thank you so much, Jason!
Jason thanks for the very informative video always look forward to your content.
My favourite rose is the double delight. The pink/red/white colour is so pretty and the scent is beautiful and it has nice long stems and can be perfect for vases.
It really symbolizes happiness. A rose by any other name! Makes me excited about my Rugosa line. ha. Their special because of the beauty/color interest on a property.
Wonderful video! Thank you for you sharing your wealth of knowledge.
I started rose gardening in May of 2023 and I've been 110% addicted to rose gardening ever since!
In fact, my rose garden obsession is so bad, that everyone in my neighborhood is constantly asking me if my roses are for sale!!
For me, my garden is my home away from home and I love each and every plant like they're my babies! ❤
Wonderful to hear that the hobby has a hold on you!
Great video. Good info, color, fragrance and zone. This video is now saved for future playbacks.
Alba, have to remember that. zone 3 a, b. Probably need to hear it 5 times... Subscribed.
Beautiful!!! Can’t believe you are in zone 8!
Lol. Yeah. I can't really talk with any credibility on "tough Canadian winters" when we're really a lot more like Seattle.
Beautiful roses! 🙏🏻
I was very Impressed and look forward to your next "Video".
Each time you show case "New Rose's 🌹🌹🌹, Varieties".
I am amazed at how much I really don't know about all the "Many Types of Rose's 🌹 there are"
Sincerely 🤠 Mr Severance,
"The Cake 🍰🎂🥳🎉 Man "&
"Xerocsapeing & Master Gardener ".
Thank you- there’s more than a few contenders here for my garden 😊
I have Desi Rose, Queen of Denmark, La France, Paul Neyron and white iceberg roses in my garden ❤.
Very nice. Would you agree that the Desi rose is a synonym for Gruss an Teplitz, or do you think it's something else?
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm it is Gruss an teplitz
I love all your roses. Blessings to you and your family from Trinidad 🇹🇹.
Great video, thank you so much
Thanks!
Thanks so much for your support!
Enjoyed the tour. Thank you.
I think it was pretty perfect actually. Thank you, gorgeous! Love the David Austin’s
Thank you!
❤great collection😊
Fun! I actually have 4 roses on your list, Iceburg, Sally Holmes, Ballarina, & Julia Child.
Really good picks too! Top performers
Thanks
Thank you so much for the support!
what an interesting walk thru the history of roses!
Thanks Karen!
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm I forgot to mention, I got my seeds in the mail today!!! Perfect timing, will be using it for demo'ing winter sowing in our library's first garden club tomorrow!
That's so nice to hear - hope you have a great meeting!
I love everything you do.❤
Divine. Thank you so much!
Reached to the end and loved it
Thank you.
Hi Jason
Your videos are amazing. They really introduced me to the old roses world. I am Syrian, moved to the UK 13 years ago. I have Quatre season and Compte de chambord and I smelled Kazanlik in Peters Beales garde. None of these smell near the strength and perfumy nature of the damask rose in my country!
Quatre season here has additional rasin smell mixed with the damask!
and i agree it doesnot look like wjat you bought as autumn Damask. Your Autumn damask looks closer in rose colour and leaves to the repeating damask rose I bought in Damascus!
Thanks Khaled. A lot of these similar Damask relatives travel under different names, so I may never be sure of a true identity. Ancient Persia covered that whole region, and was, so far as I can tell, the introducer of the Damask roses into Egypt and Rome (from origins further east on the silk road, I'm told). Imagine how much history there must be in the cultivars still in Syria and surrounding areas!
I enjoyed this video, thanks. Really informative.
Thanks for all the info!
Wow this video is very good and educational. As I live in Calgary and new to gardening, all you videos help me to grown my knowledge. This idea helps me to think which rose varieties fits in colder zone. Will you do one video for Canadian zone 3-4 roses?
Sure. It's on the list.
Thanks ❤
I'm in 5b, but I have many of your roses. I have been trying to have at least 3 of most of the old garden roses. I just ordered two more albas. I have Felicite Parmentier and just ordered two Queen of Denmark and a third Madame Hardy from Corn Hill on your recommendation. They are lovely people.
Thank you!
My pleasure!
Great video Jason and love the recommendations - only because we clearly have much the same view on roses as I have all but 4 of those listed amongst my gardens. I grow Tuecany Superb as a climber and have the stems trained over the doorway of an outbuilding in a relatively sun-free part of the garden - it does incredibly well with the lax stems covered in flowers - great rose for a difficult site. Rose de Rescht I love as a garden display - of the Portland roses always think it has the best regular shape - always tidy but not great as a cut flower as all the petals drop at once! Comte de Chambord is my favourite for fragrance, Jacques Cartier for being tough as old boots and prolific. Again lovely choice of worthy roses.
Your all Roses are very beautiful. 😊👍👍
Thanks so much!
Thanks Jason. That's a good overview. I have put in three Buff Beauty on the basis of your recomm.
I ordered a Therese Bugnet rose through Jackson & Perkins. I hope to see it bloom this year. It is my first and only rose purchase being in zone 5. I think that is what the charts say, but I don't believe them. It was mailed to me more than a month ago, bare root, and it was much too early. We still had our winter snow and frozen ground. Everyone here only plants on June first. I put it into a bucket of water for 24 hours and planted it in a pot. Now it is in the ground outside. It seems to not mind all the crazy Alaska weather such as below freezing night temperatures, rain and overcast, strong winds for days at a time and to top it off the thermometer on my balcony hit 90 degrees today. You asked for viewers to let you hear from them to ask what they would like you to feature. If you have my rose it would be nice to see how large it will become. Thank you.
I don't grow Therese Bugnet anymore, but had it for years and it's quite nice! It got to 6+ ft in my garden
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you so much. That is awesome!
Too much roses?!!! Inconceivable!!
Hi Jason, my favourite family of roses are the Bourbons.
Is there a chance that you may do a video on them, please ?
John, in Dunedin New Zealand.
Sure thing John. I'll put it on my list. I have a few specimens on the younger side right now, but I'm happy to go at the topic again in the summer.
Thank you once again for sharing your wealth of Rose knowledge. So welcome in zone 4 Northeastern Ontario where we just received a large delivery of snow.
@ queen Elizabeth 19:02, is that a Dahlia in the background? Would you be able to share the name? I love the orange and dark foliage. ❤
No, I think that's heliopsis Bleeding Hearts.
God bless you!
I’ve read that Constance Spry is only once flowering, so while interesting as David Austin’s first release I’m leaning more towards its parent Belle Isis. If it doesn’t repeat flower I guess why not just grow the original gallica.
Bit late to the party but loved seeing all these.
Great video Jason (as always)! I was just wondering where I could find a higher quality version of the rose 'family tree' you put up throughout the video, as I think it would be a fantastic reference in the burgeoning journey towards better identifying roses. Thanks again, and keep up the good work!
I did a whole video on it here: ruclips.net/video/1g0Dl7jap0o/видео.htmlsi=X7HCgM0m3teLl6Qd and there's a link in the description of that vid for a printed version from Redbubble
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Hey thanks mate :) i've been working through your (fantastic) series on varieties but i suppose that one was buried a bit deeper in the archives! appreciate all the good work you do, keep it up please :D
Where does the Lady Banks rose fit in? Is it a species rose, a botanical, a wild rose from China? I have 3 of the yellow variety and they are enormous monsters, fountains of yellow, octopuses. Prone to mildew unfortunately.
I adore Paul Neyron, one of mine favourite roses with Baron Girod de lAin, but I am in a big problems with his pruning, thinking of just let it grow option. Last year I planted Alfred Colomb another hybrid perpetual. How to prune this beauties? My Julia Child and Hot Cocoa are coming this week 😍. Big Purple is fantastic tea hybrid.I am so lucky that I bought it in my local nursery, but I am so stupid to let Mme Hardy run from stock before I bought her. And I've got Souvenir du dr Jamain 🤩. Jacques Cartier is another one of my favourites, compact, beautiful formed shrub and flowers. Thank you 🤩
Fantastic video showing bit of history of old roses to modern ones. Always enjoy to watch your videos. I hope you would like to include few more old roses like Lady banksiae lutea, Maréchal Niel, Madame Falcot and Devoniensis. Almost fifty percent of modern roses are descendants of Devoniensis. Greetings from India.
Thanks so much. I have some of these as cuttings, so we'll see if I can get them into the garden this year.
Great, would love to flourish them in your garden.
Wow! I'm a 50% representer with 3 of my 6 varieties.😂
Don Jaun, Olympiad, and Queen Elizabeth. Apparently Carabia, Lavender Angel Face, and Mr. Lincoln didn't measure up.🤣😁
I do plan on getting Portland, China, and David Austin, perhaps even a couple from some guy named Fraser I think.
This was a great snippet of rose genealogy and history specific to your selection and I appreciate the list on your website.👌
The perfume roses are a particular interest for me, especially as the edible varieties do compliment the majority of my plants here.
Very informative video Jason. Thank you.🤙
Jason, I have a few mature Ispahan roses. When you say the best time to prune them is after flowering, the issue I have with that is that they continue growing from the cut point and reach up to 8 ft by the end of summer. Should I keep pruning them back to the original cut? And should I then prune them again in early spring? I live near London, UK, to give you an idea of the climate. BTW, your videos provide a wealth of knowledge!
Thanks. I've seen that some of these can be difficult to keep at a reasonable size in a mild climate. Mine are still young enough that I'll have to leave room to update my recommendations in future years. The wood that grows, matures and hardens after your late-spring pruning is the primary flowering wood for the following year, so later pruning costs flowers. I'm going to try to prune once as hard as I need to, and then let it grow out - only taking back any stems that are so long or poorly supported that I think they'll be lost to winter wind damage anyway.
That’s a lot of beautiful roses 👍
My favourites are usually the semi doubles. My impression has been that’s a difficult category to define or that definitions vary. (I see it as a fuller flower than a single that still has a good sized center. something for me and something for the pollinators 😄) Seems like the best of both options.
Do semi doubles have any popularity?
Thanks for sharing
Yes - many in the hybrid musk class of roses would do nicely.
Hi Jason! Great fan of your! I love rose to my heart. Am living in Jamaica. I would really like your unsual rose, which makes my mouth watering. What's the procedure to deliver to Jamaican? Love your reply. Have a great day. Keep up your honesty🙏🙏❤️💯
Thanks Pansie. I'm afraid we can't ship internationally because of import/export requirements on plants. Sorry!
Okay I appreciate your quick reply, indeed great customer service, I love that. You are a great and honest man! Thanks for all these great informations. You are making a difference. If I come to Canada will it be possible to purchase some rose seeds from you(directly) keep up the great 😃 job you are doing. Indeed I will continue to watch your program. God's blessings continue be be with you. 💯❤️❤️🙏
You mention that you think that one of the parents of Champneys Pink Cluster was maybe a multiflora. It was not a multiflora. Champneys Pink Cluster was bred by using Old Blush and the Musk rose, Rosa moschata. Also, on a side note, Blush Noisette and Champneys Pink Cluster are two distinct roses. Blush Noisette is a seedling of Champneys Pink Cluster and was sent over to France.
I just found your channel. Love it, just subscribed. Do you have any rose recommendations for small (and I mean small 😊), urban yards? We have downsized and my old favourites are just too big. Thank you!
Some breeding companies have smaller "patio" or "veranda" roses chosen to be more compact. I like Lavender Veranda by Kordes. Minis are a great option. I also did a video a while back on smaller roses for containers - they don't have to be in containers, of course, but I chose them for their manageable size: ruclips.net/video/ZpWIy-pOA4c/видео.htmlsi=9qliXsUqSNuj_7BM
Thank you! 🌹
i love your videos
Thank you!
waiting for spring ;)@@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Thank you very much! This VDO is excellent!!! I’m home gardener that looking for 4 seasons interest. Any of these roses produce a good rose hips? Thank you once again.
Thanks. Have a quick search of the rugosa roses and see if you like them. Fragrant, cold hardy, repeat blooming, some fall color as the leaves turn yellow, and massive hips.
I assume your 'zones' mentioned in this video are the Canadian version of what we use in the US? Can you point me to a place where I can compare US vs Can zone definitions. I'm doing some research on a zone category problem. Thanks Jason!
As a longtime avid rose grower (I've grown many varieties you show here) I appreciate your videos. The Old Garden Rose that always has a place in my garden no matter how times I move is Centifolia Variegata - Village Maid. Exquisite. I am moving again this year (in late Winter) and must transplant two 3-year old bushes with long graceful but very thorny canes that I know I can't cut now or I lose the blooms. I will be a challenge. Any suggestions?
Thanks. I generally don't trim back much at transplant if the plants aren't too large to handle. There may be a little die-back (transplant shock) but no big deal - let it play out and then prune later. I haven't added Village Maid to my collection yet, but it's on the wish list!
I have mme, de la Roche lambert.. the most beautiful fuschia colour i’ve ever seen.. now i want Grus an treplise.. what a beauty.. Trevor white has got it but out of stock.. i’ll wait, cos Peter Beale has it but prices are shocking .. not affordable.. no wonder he has everything in stock
09:50 Königin von Dänemark is the German name of “Queen of Denmark”!
I just bought buff beauty, and you reference Buff Beauty A LOT. Can you make a video solely about the BB?
My roses love the results of all your information. However, what can I do about limp blossom stems?
It can be varietal, in which case there's nothing much to do except live with it or replace those roses. Other times is just for lack of sturdy growth - and your checklist to improve growth: full sun, decent soil, regular watering, judicious pruning (thinning especially) and feeding as needed.
Hope you make review on earth angel rose.
Thank you again for sharing. Would you please tell us how tall is your Old Blush rose? I'm surprised that it was listed as 3m/9ft because the typical China roses are not that tall...
Mine is still quite young, so at this point I'm basing the height figure on Helpmefind. I know it's been used as a hedge in places, so I assume it can be managed to a reasonable height with regular pruning
The bourbon, cabbage and English are my favorites but lately I've been looking at Japanese roses. Have you seen them?
I've been curious about them - but I'd like to know a bit more about their garden performance before I say one way or another
I’m from Puerto Rico and when I was a little girl my mom would use a rose call Rosas de cien hojas, rose of hundreds pedals. I have tried to find but can’t find it. Any suggestions?
It could be R. centifolia - which would be a pretty direct translation.
Zone 8! I’m in zone 8b way over here in Austin Texas 🥵
Lol. Weird isn't it. We've got Seattle weather here.
I want a copy of that chart
Jason! I heard you say on a past video that you don’t sell roses outside of your area, is that still standing? If not sending to Ontario would you let me know were I can buy some of these roses?
We'll be listing smaller liner-sized roses for shipping across Canada in February on www.fraservalleyrosefarm.com Otherwise, for Ontario, you might consider Palatine.
Hi Jason
Are your roses on their own roots of grafted?
I produce own-root from cuttings. Some of these varieties are grafted because that's how they were available when I bought them
Jason i’d planted all 31 bareroot roses in big pots from 20th October-19th December & they’d started to shoot away .. now that -6 hit degrees them they’ve totally shrivelled up ..the shoots.. i hope they’ll get normal..i’m worried ..
Crossing my fingers - a few shoots getting zapped back by the cold shouldn't kill an otherwise healthy rose.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm they’re nice & green stems .. i saw them with just one eye open then saw the green 8 inch branches & thought.. there is a chance of them surviving.. thank you Jason.. 1 vendor’s got them all at half price just when it’s impossible to plant them or go out in to the garden now.. gives you flu & shakes if you venture out there
Do hybrid tea and white polyantha roses survive a hard freeze?
Depends on the rose and the "hardness" of the freeze. Most will withstand a few degrees below freezing for a short duration, but may suffer some die-back if they get a longer or deeper cold while in active growth
You made me wanna get at least 1 from each variety’s family 😂 also I would like to know which roses usually are eatable? I know some Chinese roses are. How about other varieties that we can easily get from the nursery?
Thanks. All rose petals are edible, though opinions vary about which ones are the nicest flavor. Usually you'll nip off the white base of the petals because it's a little bitter.
Can you feature rosa rugosa in future videos?
Beautiful roses!!! By the way, do you have problem with thrips? I live in Malaysia, hot, humid & wet. I have to spray my roses with organic insecticide at least once a week, otherwise my roses will be attacked by thrips and I don’t have beautiful blooms & the leaves looked burnt..😢
probably better to grow a plant better suited to your environment
We do get some thrips damage in late summer, but I know that other regions have it much worse.
I admit…I’m a tad jealous.
⚘ If you live in zone 8, how can you grow roses from zones 3 & 4?
The zone hardiness works like this: a zone 3 rose is hardy enough for zones as low as 3 (down to -40 degrees) and that makes it plenty hardy to survive milder climates like mine. You can always read cold hardiness zone rating on a plant like "zone x or higher".
Btw, heirloom roses now ships to Canada ❤
Will you have Peace roses for sale in your store this spring?
I'm not 100% sure at this point. We still need to see how everything did over winter.
Hi Jason, surprised you didn't include hardy rugosas in this video or the fertile species itself for its strong and unique clove fragrance. Keep in mind that crossing rugosas with tender varieties is bound to compromise cane hardiness in the offspring; Rugelda is an example. Crossing rugosas with r. chinensis was a 10 year futile endeavour that was dropped by Svejda for good reason.
r. kordesii isn't cane hardy in the Ottawa area, suffering dieback above the snowline. It originates from a country (Germany) with a coastal climate far removed from the freezing rain received by the Nation's capital; the reason it was used in greenhouse breeding by Felicitas Svejda in her creation of the Agriculture Canada roses. Rosa kordessi may be an excellent seed parent but requires winter protection for outdoor plantation when it comes to harsh winter climates. Given that you're growing roses on the temperate coast, it all comes down to what zone and climate you're actually breeding for.
Thanks Mickey. I do have quite a few rugosas in the collection - not left off intentionally, but more just a sideline topic that I didn't have footage for at the time of editing
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm When time permits, it would be nice indeed if you could make a video of the rugosa and/or hybrid rugosa cultivars in your collection. I'd love to see them. 🌹
Please visit the southeast USA 8b in August and tell me we're the same 😂
Lol. Only insofar as winter hardiness. Summer is a whole different ballgame.
In India English roses grown from cutting can't handle temparature of 40 degree Celsius??
Some may not be the best choice for those temps. There are Indian bred roses that might be more appropriate
Do you sell cuttings for these & can you ship to the states?
Sorry, but no - we can't ship into the US
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Do you have any videos posted on sourcing the old fashioned & out-of-patent roses you feature! I'd love to have some resources for roses I can propagate for my flower farm & my nursery. I do have Hot Cocoa & read that it's out of patent now. Is it OK to prop DA roses if they're out of patent? I'm in the US. Thank you!
Your personal Top 3 roses overall?
Still changing. 'Daybreaker' blew me away with constant gorgeous blooms this year. 'Sydonie' has impressed me a lot with flower form and overall garden shape (but it's a young plant, so the jury is still out). 'Buff Beauty' might take #1. Far too many runners up to start listing them.
Do you sell Pat Austin rose plant?
Yes, it's in my collection and I propagate it regularly.