Belinda's Dream
$42.99
$42.99
Couldn't load pickup availability
In-store pickup only
Product Description
Belinda's Dream is designated an "Earth Kind" rose. This means it has been tested and found to be disease resistant, drought tolerant and in all ways a superior rose. I saw this rose blooming in a garden this past summer and determined that we needed to offer to our customers. It is a fast-growing shrub, upright and sturdy, the flowers are produced freely throughout the growing season and it has a fruity raspberry fragrance. The blooms have a hybrid tea shape with 50 petals and more and are a bridal pink color.
Planting Instructions
4x6 Roses: Dig a hole one and a half to two feet deep and wide. Mix organic fertilizer or compost with the topsoil. (Mix between 25% compost and 50% compost with your native soil).
It is important to disturb the roots as little as possible during planting. To do this, back-fill the hole with your topsoil/compost mixture, and use the 4x6 pot as a "mold" so when you pack soil around it, the patted soil is even with the top of the pot.
Next, remove the plastic pot from the ground, leaving a nice, neat hole that is the same shape. Gently turn the potted plant upside down and push the plant out of the bottom of the pot. Do NOT pull the roots apart or agitate them. Place the removed plant into the hole, and pat the soil in place gently. Water the plant in well.
3 gallon Roses: These roses have more established root systems, but it is still important to treat them with care when planting. We recommend digging a hole that is one and a half to two feet deep and wide. Amend the soil with compost/fertilizer. Gently ease the plant out of the pot. Do NOT pull from the stem. Place the plant in the hole, pat soil around the plant so that it is level with the top, and water in well.
3 gallon Roses: These roses have more established root systems, but it is still important to treat them with care when planting. We recommend digging a hole that is one and a half to two feet deep and wide. Amend the soil with compost/fertilizer. Gently ease the plant out of the pot. Do NOT pull from the stem. Place the plant in the hole, pat soil around the plant so that it is level with the top, and water in well.
Care Instructions
During the first year, be sure to water your rose often to ensure the plant doesn't shock in it's new environment. Growth will be good the first year, and by the second year you will be rewarded with a vigorous plant that will continue to establish in your garden.
During the growing season, deadhead plants regularly to promote continuous blooming. We recommend allowing own-root roses to go dormant naturally, which means holding off on deadheading in the fall. Prune back any unruly canes to avoid wind damage during the winter, but otherwise, save pruning for the early spring (before the plant starts pushing new growth).
During the growing season, deadhead plants regularly to promote continuous blooming. We recommend allowing own-root roses to go dormant naturally, which means holding off on deadheading in the fall. Prune back any unruly canes to avoid wind damage during the winter, but otherwise, save pruning for the early spring (before the plant starts pushing new growth).
