What are the different types of roses?
Floribunda
Make any landscape designs stand out with the most colorful of rose types.
Developed during the last century, these bushy shrubs have the large, showy
blossoms of the hybrid teas, but bloom more freely, setting clusters of three to
fifteen blossoms rather than a single bloom on a stem. Floribundas are versatile; an
individual shrub will fit easily into almost any sunny border planting. However,
they are perhaps most striking in mass plantings.
Hybrid Tea
One of the most popular rose types, these are tall, long-stemmed roses ideal for
cutting--the roses you usually see at the florist. The flowers are usually borne
singly, one to a stem, rather than in clusters. Blooms have a high-center point. In
the garden they are often featured as single specimens or in a traditional rose
cutting garden. Many varieties reveal a beautiful fragrance.
Grandiflora
A grandiflora is a cross between a floribunda and a hybrid tea. Grandifloras are tall
elegant plants which bloom repeatedly during the season, and generally feature
classic hybrid tea flower clusters with stems which are slightly shorter than those
of hybrid teas.
Shrub & Landscape
These roses have changed the way many people view roses. Shrub roses, especially
when compared with traditional varieties, are impressive for many reasons: their
natural disease-resistance, their willingness to grow in a variety of climates with a
minimum of attention from the gardener, their compact growth habit (very little
pruning required), not to mention the great beauty of their flowers, which are borne
consistently over a very long season. Coming in all shapes and sizes, shrub and
landscape roses work well in any landscape. Landscape roses grow close to the
ground, like ground cover, and have a very spreading habit.
Climber
Schroederflowers Garden Center
1530 S.Webster Ave Green Bay, WI. 54301
Phone: (888)HER-ROSE (920)436-6363
Hours: Monday -Saturday 8.00AM to 6:00PM
Sunday - 10.00AM to 3:00PM