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Central Iowa Rose, Clematis, & Peony Garden
Photo courtesy of a_carl76
Rose, peony and clematis
Listing last updated on Fri Mar 2025
Des Moines, Iowa 50321 United States
USDA Zone: 5b (-15 to -10 F / -26.1 - 23.4 C)
I consider myself an eclectic rose collector. I am reaching almost 1000 rose separate varieties and have no desire to stop because I can't stop myself. I am not good at shovel pruning because what if this is the year they actually do well. I'll let nature decide who is worthy or not - and then try to replace it when nature says no.
I grow practically anything that is interesting, or not interesting, big, or small, thorny, thornless, and anything inbetween. I like them short, and tall, bushy and climbing, reblooming and not reblooming. My favorite ones are the ones that have colors (so yeah all of them). The classes I grow include hybrid teas, grandifloras, floribundas, miniatures, mini-floras, large flowered climbers, ramblers, shrubs, bourbons, hybrid perpetuals, damasks, polyanthas, rugosas and species (I am sure I missed a few)
I have started to pair clematis with climbing and taller shrub roses. This pairing can be amazing and can extend the blooming in a single space when a once-blooming rose has a repeat or late blooming clematis with them. I plan to add more of these as well.
I only have a handful of peonies at this time. I am planning on expanding the number of peonies I grow so as to create a peony cutting garden. Stay tuned!
I live in Des Moines with a medium sized yard (1/4 acre) and am hopefully going to find more land soon - yes all my babies will come with me. The soil is loamy clay, but I am slowly improving that. Most of the roses are grown on their own roots so I don't have to worry about harsh winter conditions killing the bud unions on my roses. The few budded plants I do have (usually bought this way because they are not available with their own roots) are planted deeper so that the bud union is between 1 and 2 inches below the surface. Usually they become own rooted this way.
My main concern about my roses is winter care. Winters can be quite cold and I spend each fall making sure I put my roses to sleep properly. I have employed several methods using leaves donated by my neighbors. For my tender roses I used to only mound the leaves all around each rose bush. I have since found that using cement curing blankets on the beds insulated them enough to the point where I usually do not have any winter kill. For the ones that are not located in the mass rose beds, I wrap pieces of fiberglass insulation around the base before winter and remove them at the end. I usually only have to remove the exposed parts of the plants.
I have tried to collect as many of the Buck and Brownell roses as I can find. This is mainly because they are what I started with when I first got into growing roses despite being advised not to. The plants were pretty pathetic when I got them, but I had them blooming on great looking plants by summer's end. I am always looking to expand my Buck and Brownell collection so if any of you out there have some of his roses that I don't have, I'm begging you to send them my way.
 
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