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  2. How To Protect Your Roses This Winter Before It's Too Late

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/protect-roses-winter-too...

    Garden or bagged soil is mounded around the base of the rose to protect the roots and crown of the plant. Rack back mulch in a 12-inch diameter circle around the base of the plant.

  3. How to Protect Your Flowers From Frost So They Can ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/protect-flowers-frost-survive-cold...

    Cold temperature affects the cell walls of plants, causing the water inside to expand and contract. While the plant may look fine in the morning with just a touch of white frost, the cell wall ...

  4. Here Are the Best Ways to Protect Your Plants from Frost - AOL

    www.aol.com/best-ways-protect-plants-frost...

    Aside from moving plants inside during the colder months, there are several other practical strategies to protect your garden from frost and harsh winter conditions. Gary McCoy, a store manager at ...

  5. Garden roses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden_roses

    Standard roses with winter protection against freezing, Vienna. In the garden, roses are grown as bushes, shrubs or climbers. "Bushes" are usually comparatively low growing, often quite upright in habit, with multiple stems emerging near ground level; they are often grown formally in beds with other roses.

  6. Helleborus niger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helleborus_niger

    Helleborus niger, commonly called Christmas rose or black hellebore, is an evergreen perennial flowering plant in the buttercup family, Ranunculaceae. It is one of about 20 species from the genus Hellebore. It is a poisonous cottage garden favourite because it flowers in the depths of winter.

  7. List of pests and diseases of roses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pests_and_diseases...

    Preferring light-coloured blooms and often appearing in plague numbers, flowers are often left looking scarred, warped, and lustreless. [4] Rose slugs (rose sawflies) – Sawflies are non-stinging wasps (Hymenoptera) in the suborder Symphyta, not flies . They lay eggs in plant leaves or stems with a saw-like ovipositor.

  8. Hellebore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hellebore

    Botrytis cinerea or grey mold is a fungal disease that infects most ornamental plants. The fungus causes a decay of plant tissues and grows fuzzy gray-brown mold over the decaying areas, such as the buds, leaves, and flowers. Parts of the plant may shrivel and die after exposure to the mold, particularly the flowers.

  9. Rosa rubiginosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosa_rubiginosa

    In addition to its pink flowers, it is valued for its scent and the hips that form after the flowers and persist well into the winter. Graham Thomas recommends that it should be planted on the south or west side of the garden so that the fragrance will be brought into the garden on warm, moist winds.

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