Rose Gemini™
Reaching 6 feet tall and nearly as wide, this is a great choice for a "living wall" in the garden!
Gemini (TM) is a double delight, with bicolor blooms in bright, complementary tones of cream and coral atop long, elegant stems. An All-America Rose Selection as valuable for large blooms and high petal count as for its delightful colors, it is a hybrid tea that looks dressy enough for the formal Rose garden, yet cheery enough for the mixed border!
You'll love these fully double 4 1/2-inch blooms, each packed with 25 to 30 petals held in perfectly symmetrical whorls. The flowers open from fat buds that arise on the end of long, strong stems clothed in dark green foliage. The buds themselves are so showy you may be tempted to cut them even before the blooms spiral open! But try to wait, for this soft-toned red and white combination of color is breathtaking!
Gemini is moderately fragrant, with a sweet scent that won't overwhelm you indoors and doesn't fight with that of other Roses in the garden. The plant is very vigorous and large, reaching 5 to 6 feet tall and 4 to 5 feet wide when mature. What an imposing presence it makes against the patio wall or planted in a long line as a living wall in the garden!
The blooms begin in late spring and continue into summer on this fine performer. Get your vases ready for the best indoor arrangements of their careers with these long-stemmed, double-colored beauties!
Plant Gemini in full sun and well-drained soil, organically enriched and kept evenly moist. It flowers best with a regular feeding throughout the growth season, and is hardy from zones 5-9.
| Genus | Rosa |
| Variety | Gemini™ |
| Bloom Season | Late Spring |
| Habit | Upright |
| Zone | 5 - 9 |
| Plant Height | 5 ft - 6 ft |
| Plant Width | 4 ft - 5 ft |
| Bloom Size | 5 in |
| Item Form | Bareroot |
| Additional Characteristics | Flower, Grafted |
| Bloom Color | Coral, Cream |
| Foliage Color | Dark Green |
| Light Requirements | Full Sun |
| Moisture Requirements | Moist, well-drained |
| Soil Tolerance | Normal, loamy |
| Uses | Border, Cut Flowers, Ornamental, Outdoor, Beds |
| Restrictions | CAN, PR |
Bareroot roses are an inexpensive and easy option for early-season planting. In fact, late winter is the best time to plant. Bareroot roses are two-year, fully established plants that meet the highest industry standards. They arrive dormant, which makes them ideal for planting. The roots get to acclimate to native soil, as opposed to the packaged soil. And of course, since they aren’t in soil when you get them, there’s no mess to contend with.
Bareroot roses may look dead, with their brown roots and dormant stem, but plants that arrive this way actually have the advantage of being able to focus their energies on strong root development rather than having to support an extensive growth of leaves during planting, which is very stressful.
You can plant your bareroot roses earlier in the growing season as well, since there aren’t any leaves to get nipped back by frost. They can typically be planted as early as six weeks before your area’s last frost date in the spring and no later than two weeks after that average date. Since they don’t have to provide water to leaves or flowers, they usually establish faster than those that arrive in containers.
Container roses should typically be planted in late spring. They’re easy to plant (all you need is a trowel), and they provide instant gratification, as they aren’t dormant and will have buds within a few short weeks, if they don’t when they arrive. They’re also perfect for transplanting into decorative containers and make an attractive gift.
Container roses are usually nicely leafed out, and may even have flowers on them, which is a great way for you to know when you purchase them what they’re going to look and smell like. The downside of this is that the plants have to focus some of their energy on sustaining the blooms, rather than being able to focus it all on root development.
As you can see, there are advantages and disadvantages to both bareroot or container roses, but whichever you decide is the best for your garden, we feel certain you’ll become a lifelong rose lover, if you aren’t already!
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Find your Climate/Planting ZoneSimply enter your zip code to find your area's climate zone, and then review our Summer or Winter Care of Roses for detailed information for growing roses in your region. Click here for the zone map Seasonal advice and suggestions for maintaining your roses.Climbing RosesVersatile climbers function as charming cover up and take garden color to new heights. Click here to learn more. Grower's CornerA series of gardening articles from Mike Cady, Horticulturist, J&P. Click here for the latest article. | |||||||||










