White Out Rose Discount

Description
The Closest Thing to a White Knock Out Rose
* Long blooming, up to 9 months!
* Drought tolerant, pest & disease resistant
* Adapts to many soils and conditions
* Cold hardy, to zone 5
Long Blooming Season
Enjoy a blast of white roses that continuously bloom from late spring through frost. Unlike some seasonal flowering shrubs that have a beautiful burst of blooms for a few weeks, the White Knockout Rose delivers nonstop magnificent flowers for up to 9 months.
Versatile Plant for Yard or Patio
Any yard or patio can accommodate the compact White Out Rose. Nonstop blooming and a mature height of only 3-4 feet give you great versatility for design.
Planted in containers, this bush will light up your porch, patio or pool area too. Place in bright sunlight and bask in its beauty all summer.
Low Maintenance
This easy to grow rose shrub looks beautiful with no shearing required! It adapts to most soil conditions and is pest and disease resistant. If you re looking for a gorgeous, easy to grow shrub, you can t go wrong with our White Out Rose.
Order Now
We know you want fast-growing, no fuss rose shrubs to beautify your yard. Your roses will arrive in great shape, ready to create an instant impact anywhere around your home. We suggest you quickly reserve your White Out Rose bush, as availability will not last long.
Planting & Care
A unique compact rose with dark green leaves and loads of white flowers, the White Out Rose (Rosa ‘RADwhite’) is a great addition to any landscape large or small. A small rose only reaching 3-4 feet tall wide it is a moderate grower of 12-18 inches per year. Growing from USDA zones 5-10, they can tolerate temperatures down to -10 degrees and are heat drought tolerant as well. They thrive and bloom best in full sun, and once established in their home they can bloom up to 9 months out of the year (depending on your location).
Seasonal information: white out roses are upright shrubs that form a tidy mound 3 to 4 feet high and bloom from June to the first hard frost. In spring, trim any broken or dead branches. You can shape the white out rose at this time. In zones with cold, wet winters, give your white out rose winter protection by planting on the leeward side of buildings or walls. Or you can wrap snow fencing loosely around the rose and cover with straw.
Selecting a location: Choose a well-drained site in full to partial sun. If you choose partial sun, make sure your white out roses receive at least six hours of direct sun a day (afternoon shade is better than morning shade). If you have clay or sandy soil, work well-rotted manure or compost into the planting site.
Planting instructions:
1) You should start by digging a hole twice as wide and twice as deep as the root ball.
2) Mix the manure or compost with the soil you have removed.
3) Backfill the soil until you have a hole the same size or slightly larger than the container the rose is in.
4) Plant the rose at the same depth as it is in the container.
5) Space white out roses three feet apart.
6) Mulch the planting site to retain soil moisture and keep competing growth from coming up around the rose bush.
Watering: Keep white out roses moist at all times. Water around the roots rather than overhead (or showering).
Fertilization: Fertilize with an organic rose fertilizer once a month. Use organic fertilizer rather than synthetic fertilizers as synthetics can promote weak growth and your rose will have more foliage and fewer flowers.
Pruning: Avoid pruning the white out roses at all in the first 2 to 3 years. Sterilize your sharp pruning shears with hot water or rubbing alcohol. This guarantees a cleaner, healthier cut. Always prune at an angle and not straight across. Activate the white out roses into growth and blooming by pruning it back a little in the spring after the last hard freeze. Keep the white out roses under control or if you want it smaller than it’s 3-feet wide by 4-inches tall size by pruning it back in the late summer or early fall. Remove dead or old canes at any time. Also cut very thin canes that might be coming up from the ground. Prune your mature plants by using the 1 3 rule each year in the spring. Remove 1 3 of the oldest canes and any stems that are damaged, diseased or dead.
Additional Information
Size | 1 Gallon, 2 Gallon, 3 Gallon |
---|