Friday, December 17, 2010

Completing My Garden of English Roses

In October, I introduced you to my idea to create a garden of David Austin roses in THIS blog post.  The garden is designed and planted now, and I thought I'd take this chance to bring you up to date on how I did it.

The whole garden measures 40 feet long by 32 feet wide. This fits perfectly in front of the little cinderblock building beside our barn.  The beds on the outside of the garden are 6 feet wide, and the island in the center is 12 x 20. By the end of next year, I hope to have a picket fence installed to enclose this garden.




Now that I had a blank garden on paper, it was time to see how to arrange the roses. I used a compass and drew circles on a piece of card stock. Each circle is in scale with the potential diameter of each of the roses. This way, I could play with the 'roses' like puzzle pieces, and move them around until I had an arrangement that I was pleased with.I started with the center roses in the island bed. Abraham Darby is in the middle, because he is beautiful and has the potential to be 6 or 7 feet tall and dominate that space. Red Coat and Dapple Dawn are also fairly large, and similar in habit, so they went beside Abraham Darby.  The rest of the island bed is filled at the edges with some of the smaller roses in my collection.



Each of the outside corners of this garden hold roses that have the potential to get big and leggy.  Sir Clough and Cressida will grow the usual Austin 'Octopus Canes', and I have given them room to spread out.  Charles Austin is a climber, and The Generous Gardener is a beast, and each of them can flop and stretch along the future fence.



For the most part, the larger roses are toward the back of the beds along the fence, and the shorter roses are beside the path.  I placed small roses on the fence beside Charles Austin and The Generous Gardener to give me a buffer in case these two roses outgrow their allotted space.  There will be an arbor and a bench in the space between Heritage and Pat Austin, to provide a place to sit and admire the garden.


Many of the roses I have collected for this garden are ones that have been discontinued by David Austin Roses.  Some have been superseded by newer varieties, and others have been deemed to be inferior.  I am a rescuer at heart, and I had to give these roses a try for myself to see if they deserve a place here in my garden. 

The beds themselves are edged with 4 x 4 timbers.  We got these timbers for free this summer from a neighbor who was replacing his pasture fencing.  We were thrilled to get them, and he was glad he didn't have to load them up and haul them away.  There are probably enough timbers here to edge every garden I have!




The roses are all planted now.  My friend Robert came over one day in November, bringing with him his trusty Fiskars shovel, and he and I made quick work of the job.  It's great to have a friend who is such a great hole digger!  The Husband went to work mulching the beds shortly afterward.




Things in this garden are all finished now!  When spring comes, and the roses start to grow and bloom, I'll be really excited to see how everything settles in and matures.

Before you start congratulating me on such a job well done, I must confess that I still technically have some David Austin roses that I must find places for.  I have an order for eight coming from California in March, and there are at least three in the greenhouse that have recently rooted and will be ready to plant next spring.  Fortunately, there is space at the top of this plan for a bit of expansion.


The mulch isn't quite finished in this photo, but you get the idea.


For those of you who are interested, here is the list of all the roses that are planted in this garden:

Abraham Darby
Belle Story
Bow Bells
Charles Austin
Comte de Champagne
Cressida
Dapple Dawn
Dove
Emanuel
Glamis Castle
Happy Child
Heritage
Jaquenetta
Lilian Austin
Lovely Child
Mary Rose
Molineux
Morning Mist
Pat Austin
Peach Blossom
Pretty Jessica
Prospero
Queen Nefertiti
Red Coat
Sharifa Asma
Sir Clough
Sister Elizabeth
Symphony
Tamora
The Generous Gardener
The Herbalist
The Knight
The Miller
The Reeve
The Squire
Wildeve

7 comments:

  1. Nice layout Connie! Can't wait to see the pictures of the garden two years from now!

    On a side note, nice way to lay everything out according to size. I tried for years to find a decent landscaping computer program to do stuff like that easily and finally gave up and went back to pen and graph paper as well.

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  2. Holy moly girl, your energy is amazing!!! I love it and can't wait to take a gander at it when it's in bloom this spring!

    Kat :)

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  3. Where... do you find... the energy. And WOW what a layout, it's gonna look fabulous. That's exactly the way I would lay it out. (just kidding myself there)

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  4. Wow! Cannot wait to see this garden grow. The scent will be outta this world.

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  5. I can hardly wait to see your roses bloom in the spring. How beautiful it will be. I love David Austin roses!
    I am your newest follower.
    Cindy

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  6. I don't know where I was when you were so busy with all this gardening but I am floored and excited about your new Rose Garden. One of my life dreams is to go visit David Austin's rose garden in England. But maybe I can visit your! I will watch your progress with such anticipation!!

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  7. Beautiful garden,I need to use your method, my Abraham Darby is not in the best place. It will be wonderful to see it in bloom. Sue Ellen

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