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Flavorette® Honey-Apricot Rose

Shrub

9 total reviews

  • Light and sweet edible petals!
  • No deadheading is required for rebloom.
  • Remarkable landscape performance.
  • Zones 4-8, sun, 5-8' tall x 3-4' wide at maturity.
  • ZONE
  • EXPOSURE
  • HEIGHT
Size: One Quart
Regular price $34.00
Sale price Sale: $34.00 Regular price Each
Total: $34.00
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Hand-Picked at Our Greenhouse
Shipped to Your Door
Arrives as a Young Plant
60 Day Risk-Free Guarantee
Hand-Picked at Our Greenhouse
Shipped to Your Door
Arrives as a Young Plant
60 Day Risk-Free Guarantee
Hand-Picked at Our Greenhouse
Shipped to Your Door
Arrives as a Young Plant
60 Day Risk-Free Guarantee
Hand-Picked at Our Greenhouse
Shipped to Your Door
Arrives as a Young Plant
60 Day Risk-Free Guarantee
Hand-Picked at Our Greenhouse
Shipped to Your Door
Arrives as a Young Plant
60 Day Risk-Free Guarantee
Hand-Picked at Our Greenhouse
Shipped to Your Door
Arrives as a Young Plant
60 Day Risk-Free Guarantee

Description

Have your roses and eat them too? Expand your garden from the landscape to your plate by incorporating Flavorette® Honey-Apricot rose petals into your favorite dishes, desserts, and drinks! Lush apricot flowers bloom continuously through the summer and have a light, sweet flavor. If whipping up a new recipe isn't your forte, Flavorette® Honey-Apricot rose will still add flavor to your garden with its incredible landscape performance.

Yes, we really mean it. The petals on this rose are edible. If you want to grow it to enjoy on desserts, we don't recommend spraying it with chemicals. Thankfully, it's a disease-resistant rose from Proven Winners so it won't need it anyways.

Details

Botanical name: Rosa x 'Boznatafra'
Patent #: USPPAF
Common name: Rose
Zone: 4-8
Sun exposure: Sun
Height x width: 3-4' tall x 3-4' wide
Flower color: Apricot
Foliage color: Green
Season of Interest: Summer-fall
Bloom time: Summer
Features: Proven Winners, heat tolerant, container plants, best sellers, best for beginners
Uses: Accent border, container or cottage gardening, ground cover, hedge, massing.

How to Grow

Soil: Prefers moist, slightly acidic, well-draining soil. Roses benefit from the addition of compost, aged manure, or leafmold to the planting soil.
Light: Sun (> 6 hours sun)
Water:Try to keep the soil evenly moist, especially in their first growing season. Never allow the foliage to remain wet into the evening; water early in the day.
Spacing: 3 - 4 ft.
Fertilizing: To keep the flowers coming, feed your roses with a fertilizer blended especially for roses. This can be done after each bloom cycle.
Winterizing: Spread a layer of composted manure, compost, or shredded leaves over the base of the plant in late fall after the ground freezes. Covering these mounds and the lower parts of the bushes with evergreen boughs will add protection. Pull the mounding material away from the stem as new growth emerges in spring. Prune injured branches over when new buds emerge in spring.
Maintenance & pruning: Prune to remove deadwood, to control or direct growth, and to promote flowering. Wait until growth breaks in early spring before pruning. Every 2 or 3 years, remove about one-third of the old branches to stimulate new, fresh growth. Remove faded flowers to encourage blooming.

5 Ways to Use Flowers at Your Summer Garden Party

From weddings and graduation parties to backyard get-togethers, summer is the perfect opportunity to socialize with friends and loved ones in the beautiful outdoors. Whether you’re adding petals to a gorgeous cake or making arrangements to wow guests, you can use flowers from your garden in many ways during your next summer party.

GET INSPIRED

Plant spacing is based on the ultimate width of the plants. This figure is normally given as a range; for example, 3-5’. If you live in a cold climate and/or want plants to fill in more quickly, plan to space at the shorter end of the range. If you live in a warm climate, are on a limited budget, or are willing to wait longer for plants to touch, use the higher end of the range. Using the larger number is recommended when calculating distance from a building or structure. There’s really no such thing as "maximum spacing": if you don’t want your plants to touch, you can space them as far apart as you’d like. All plant spacing is calculated on center, or in other words, the centers of the plants are spaced one half of their eventual width apart:

bush distance

Unless you are planting in a straight line, as you might for hedges or edging, space your plants in a staggered or zig-zag pattern for a more interesting and naturalistic look:

bush distance zigzag

Not sure just how many plants will fit in your garden? Our calculator gives you the exact amount of plants required for your space. Simply update the values and the calculator will re-calculate accordingly. Spacing information can be found in the 'How to Grow' tab on each plant's page.

Plant Spacing Calculator

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