Find out everything you need to know about rose rosette disease to prevent, diagnose, and manage it so you can reduce its spread. If you’ve ever seen a rose bush that looked like something out of a ...
Bad things can happen to good plants — even when you carefully tend to them. It’s a sad fact that gardeners — and garden centers — deal with year in, year out. That’s how it is with Anderson’s Home ...
Remember when you would walk into the classroom and your teacher would announce a pop quiz? Sometimes this felt like punishment, but the quizzes were often a great learning tool. Now’s your chance to ...
Recently a neighbor showed me a picture of his knockout roses and asked me if I thought they had rose rosette disease. He was concerned because he has several of these roses in his front landscape and ...
If you are a rose person (and you know who you are), roses are not only the centerpiece of your garden but are the plant that commands most of your attention. I’m not a rose person, if you can’t tell.
Long prized for their striking flowers and wonderful scent, roses are a garden staple in landscapes around the world. But it is not uncommon these days to see rose plants in which something seems off.
A gardening expert revealed the best tip to grow beautiful roses that are free from a common disease - black spot.
As with all plants, roses can succumb to many diseases and pests. Unfortunately, there are common diseases that target these hugely popular flowering shrubs, which can cause the plants to suffer and ...
Roses are one of the most popular landscape plants, but many homeowners are unfamiliar with the most common rose problems. Rose slug, blackspot, rose rosette and powdery mildew can all have either ...
Rose rosette disease (RRD) is a rose disease that has been in existence since the 1940s but that did not have a wide impact on the rose industry or those of us who grow them for many decades. However, ...
Q: I have 17 beautiful shrub roses lining my walk, and they have contracted rose rosette disease. All the research information I have found indicates I should rip them out immediately so they won't ...