Most of us have boundary walls, fences, or garden buildings such as sheds or studios that are in shade for part of the day, and in some cases all day long, especially if your garden faces north or ...
Climbing roses serve a functional purpose while adding color, texture, and beauty to a landscape. Most types of rose bushes grow like shrubs, but these climbers can be trained to screen for privacy, ...
Climbing roses have a special, romantic charm often associated with cottage gardens. With their long canes, they work their way up pillars, fences, arbors, gazebos, or a brick facade. They are ...
Climbing roses in full bloom are one of the most romantic sights in any outdoor space. They spill over stone walls, drape across arbors, and give doorways a storybook charm with their dreamy petals ...
These vigorously growing climbing roses create old-fashioned cottage charm. Climbing roses (Rosa setigera) add old-fashioned cottage charm to your Southern garden. Vigorous and relatively easy to grow ...
Pergolas work great for creating a shady spot to gather in outdoors. These tall structures feature open-topped canopies that can be built over walkways, dining areas, and other outdoor spaces.
Climbing plants are great garden helpers, useful for disguising eyesores or covering a bare wall or fence with flowers and foliage. They can bring brightness to even the smallest garden without taking ...
When most people think about growing roses, they think of bushes and shrubs. If you haven’t discovered the exceptional beauty and versatility of climbing roses, you’re in for a happy surprise. Roses ...
There are two categories of climbing roses: repeat-blooming types and once-blooming types. Although repeat-blooming climbing roses may be pruned later this month or in early February along with repeat ...
They say there’s no such thing as the perfect couple. But when it comes to companionable, compatible planting, it’s fair to say climbing roses and clematis make a near-unbeatable combination. Like ...