Brilliant Rose blooms in shades of rich yellow!
Rose Gina Lollobrigida
Gina Lollabrigida is a Wayside Original Introduction!
Flowers continuously from spring to fall!
A Wayside Original Introduction. As you would expect from its name, opulent beauty abounds in this rich yellow rose. Its color is as brilliant as a golden late-summer afternoon, its fragrance sweet and heady, and its cup-shaped blooms magnificent. Flowers continuously from summer to fall, each 5- to 6-inch bloom packed with 60 petals. Upright plants are 4 to 5 feet tall, 3 feet wide. Zones 5-9.
| Genus | Rosa |
| Variety | 'Gina Lollobrigida' |
| Bloom Season | Early Summer - Mid Fall |
| Habit | Upright |
| Zone | 5 - 9 |
| Plant Height | 4 ft - 5 ft |
| Plant Width | 3 ft |
| Bloom Size | 3 in |
| Item Form | Bareroot |
| Additional Characteristics | Flower, Fragrance, Needs Deadheading |
| Bloom Color | Yellow |
| Bloom Season | Fall, Summer |
| Flower Shape | Double |
| Foliage Color | Dark Green |
| Light Requirements | Full Sun |
| Moisture Requirements | Moist, well-drained |
| Soil Tolerance | Normal, loamy |
| Uses | Beds, Cut Flowers, Ornamental, Outdoor |
| Restrictions | CAN, PR |
Very Impressed!
I just received this rose and I am extremely impressed! The branches are plentiful and so are the roots! I expect it to do wonderfully. There are even tiny little growth buds on the branches! I ordered roses from 3 different mail order companies this year, and this is definitely the best rose of all 3 companies. Makes me wish I would have ordered all of the roses from Wayside!
Additional pruning tips for healthy, beautiful, productive roses:- Whether you’re deadheading, removing dead wood, or performing an annual pruning, make sure your cuts are no more than ¼ inch (5 mm) above a bud, and slope the cut away from the bud, to prevent water from collecting on it.
- Your cuts should always be clean, so keep your pruning shears sharp, and use pruning tools that are appropriately sized to whatever size stems you are cutting.
- To encourage an open-centered form, cut to an outward-facing bud. To encourage upright growth on roses with a spreading habit, prune a few of the stems to inward-facing buds.
- Prune any dieback to the healthy, white pith.
- Remove dead or diseased stems, as well as any that cross or are spindly.
- Your goal should be to have well-spaced stems that allow for a free flow of air.
- If pruning an established plant, remove any old wood that is flowering poorly, and use a saw to get rid of old stubs that are no longer producing new shoots.
- Other than climbing roses, you should prune newly planted roses hard, which encourages vigorous shoot production.
- When removing suckers, trace them back to the roots from which they are growing, and simply take them off.








