Roses
Consider these roses as you would any other flowering shrub or vine as this about all the care they require. Once well-established, many of these plants can begin flowering as early as February and most of these will cycle in and out of flower until fall. For example, my grandfather called Louis Phillip the eleven-month rose becuase it often flowers that much of the year in zone 8B. Many of the roses we offer have been selected as Earth-Kind® Roses, a program from the Texas A&M Agri-Life Extension Service and these roses are selected "based on the results of extensive research and field trials and is awarded only to those roses demonstrating superior pest tolerance, combined with outstanding landscape performance." Most of these roses are disease resistant meaning that they can survive and will often even thrive under average garden conditions and are often found growing on old home sites as well as in cemeteries with virtually no care. This does not mean that they are disease free but they do not require the constant care that modern roses often need like a spraying regimen for fungi and other pests as well as vigorous biennial pruning regimens. In fact, most of these roses prefer not to be pruned hard beyond the normal removal of dead wood and so can be treated like any other flowering shrub or vine providing color in the garden or landscape for much of the growing season. Deadheading is not required but may reduce the time that it takes for new buds to form. Enjoy!