-
Soil Testing is Worth the Effort
-
Sweetly Scented Tulips
-
Cool-Season Annuals
-
Variegated Plants Create Drama
-
Garden Catalog Collector
-
Backyard Makeover Game
-
Friendly Ways to Battle Garden Pests
-
How to Grow Raspberries
-
The Only Shrubs You Need to Grow
-
Find the Perfect Tomato
-
Video: Make a Straw-Bale Garden
-
Viburnums are Versatile Shrubs
-
All About Starting Seeds
-
Lilacs: Time for a Fresh Look
-
Celebrate Spring with Cool-Season Containers
-
Make Your Own Hypertufa Container
-
Spectacular Spring Bloomers
-
Building a Compost Bin
-
10 Perennials Easily Grown from Seed
-
How to Start a Vegetable Garden
-
Design an Engaging Entryway
-
15 Deer-Resistant Plants
-
Perfect Edges for Your Beds and Borders
-
Enchanting Japanese Maples
-
A Gardener's Checklist for Early Spring
Subscribe to RSS feed
Taking Roses To New Heights - Into Your Trees
3 commentsThe huge rambling roses are stunning in full bloom. But is there a spot for them in an average sized garden. The answer is up in the trees.
view details
When It Comes To Climbing Roses The Key Is Patience
Many a gardener is frustrated by a climbing rose not blooming the first season. Here is why and what you can do about it.
view details
Rejuvenating An Old Climbing Rose
You may have read the that it's good to occasionally take out an old cane at the base of a climbing rose. But why should you do this and does it help. Our video answers your questions.
view details
Covering An Arbor With Roses
8 commentsDreaming of a rose covered arbor bathed in blossoms? Does your dream come up short with only blooms covering top. We show you how to cover an arbor from top to bottom.
view details
Pruning & Controlling A Climbing Rose
6 commentsDoing anything with climbing roses can be intimidating - particularly pruning. We have a short video with some tips to make it easy and get the best out of your climbing roses.
view details
Got Young Climbing Roses? Let em Grow!
6 commentsThere can be some confusion about how to treat young climbing roses come pruning time. So let's clear that up!
view details
What to use as a "Trellis" for a climbing rose
2 commentsI got a question the other day from a reader asking what kind of "trellis" should they use for a climbing rose. Wire, wood, something else? The answer is easier than you think!
view details
Video: How to Train a Rose on a Trellis
17 commentsLearn the secret of blanketing a trellis in blooms.
view details
Everyone loves roses. If you always wanted to add roses to your garden but were too intimidated by their diva reputation, Roses Are Plants, Too is the blog for you.
Paul Zimmerman has grown thousands of roses for over 15 years and for ten of those years in a sustainable manner. His common-sense approach shows you how to integrate garden roses into your landscape by looking at them as nothing more than flowering shrubs, all the while encouraging you to trust your own "Gardener's Instincts" in the care of these beautiful plants.
You will learn how to prune and train climbing roses, and how to get the most "ka-bloom" out of your shrub, David Austin and Knockout rose bushes. You'll get tips on growing roses organically and trimming them all season to keep their shape. You'll discover the difference between own-root and grafted roses, and more. Much of the instruction will be via videos that Paul produces himself!
Paul Zimmerman ran a rose care company in Los Angeles before moving to South Carolina to start Ashdown Roses. Now he focuses on rose education and teaching via Paul Zimmerman Roses. He lectures, gives workshops, and judges rose trials around the world, and it is this experience he brings to this blog.
Whether you are new to roses or an experienced grower, Paul will open your garden to the vast diversity our national flower offers.
If you have questions about roses and rose care or would like to share your own experiences please visit our Roses Are Plants, Too discussion forum.
To inquire about Paul's workshops and lectures, email him at paul@paulzimmermanroses.com.











