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Rose Sevillana™  PP#6,384
Red Blooms from Spring till Frost, Followed by Scarlet Fruit!
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Rose Sevillana™ PP#6,384

Item # 36566
$16.95 ea
Buy 3+ at $14.95 ea
Buy 6+ at $13.95 ea
Item is sold out.

This shrub rose is very pest- and disease-tolerant.

Big 3-inch blooms are fully double and borne in dense, colorful clusters!
(Meigekanu) PP#6,384. Sevillana offers brilliant red color from spring through winter! Dense clusters of true-red blooms, each fully double and 3 inches across, arise continuously against healthy green foliage from spring till frost. When the blooms finally pass, they are followed by masses of rich scarlet fruit from fall into winter!

Splendid as a hedge or mass planting, Sevillana reaches 3 to 4 feet tall, 2 to 3 feet wide. An early-spring pruning of the top growth is the only maintenance required. Space plants 2 feet apart.

The Meidiland family of shrub roses is one of the most exciting developments in the plant world. These roses can be enjoyed year-round as landscape shrubs! They're easy to grow, needing little attention and, unlike the more familiar Hybrid Teas and Floribunda types, they aren't prone to disease. They add mass color to the garden, and are appealing even when not in bloom, for their foliage is attractive and they often bear fruits or bright canes. And because they're grown on their own roots, they're hardy anywhere in the 48 contiguous states! Even if a particularly tough winter nips them, they bounce back in spring, true-to-name and as bloom-happy as ever!

Genus Rosa
Variety Sevillana™
Bloom Season Late Spring - Mid Fall
Habit Upright
Zone 5 - 9
Plant Height 3 ft - 4 ft
Plant Width 24 in - 3 ft
Bloom Size 3 in
Item Form Bareroot
Additional Characteristics Double Bloom, Flower, Rose Hips
Bloom Color Red
Flower Shape Double
Foliage Color Dark Green
Light Requirements Full Sun
Moisture Requirements Moist,  well-drained
Resistance Disease Resistant, Pest Resistant
Season Of Interest Summer, Winter, Spring, Fall
Soil Tolerance Normal,  loamy
Uses Hedge, Ornamental, Outdoor
Restrictions CAN, PR
Overall Rating: 5 Stars
Average Based on 1 Reviews Write a Review
Rose Sevillana
Janet from OH wrote (May 08, 2012):
Loved this rose bush in my mother-in-laws shaded backyard years ago - knee high and adorable and absolutely COVERED in blooms May-October, with almost NO down time. Bought a couple and they doubled in height 3 years in a row and are now nearly 6 feet high and the pride of my entire garden. Strangers ask about them. As long as they stay dead-headed, they can't be stopped. They didn't thrive well the first year I planted them - I had them right up against my house in poorly drained soil. Once I moved them out a couple of yards from the house, east side with full morning and early afternoon sun, they took off - what a surprise.
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.
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