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 ...
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.
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 ...
Checks and balances occur not only in our government, but also in gardens that are rich in beneficials and lush in plant diversity. These gardens benefit from a harmonious interplay of checks and ...
Three new reports of rose rosette disease, which was first confirmed in Bossier City in the fall of 2015, have recently been diagnosed in landscapes in Shreveport and Bossier City. The “devastating” ...
The outlook for American-grown roses is becoming a bit less rosy, with the spread of an incurable virus that’s causing major damage to the nation’s $250-million-a-year rose business. U.S. rose bush ...
Telltale signs of a rose bush infected with rose rosette disease are clusters of deformed red leaves, called "witches' brooms," with an overgrowth of many tiny thorns. If your roses don’t look quite ...
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 ...
Earlier this month, workers at Allentown’s Malcolm W. Gross Memorial Rose Garden in the city’s West End dug up more than 700 rose bushes after finding a virulent virus spreading among the plants. The ...
Math was not my favorite subject in school, so I have always been a little wary of mathematical concepts. But growing roses introduced me to the disease triangle, which is one bit of geometry triangle ...
NEW ORLEANS >> The outlook for American-grown roses is becoming a bit less rosy, with the spread of an incurable virus that’s causing major damage to the nation’s $250-million-a-year rose business.