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Rosa 'Golden Gate' Climbing Max Rose
Rosa 'Golden Gate' Climbing Max Rose
Rosa 'Golden Gate' Climbing Max Rose
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Dispatch by letter from 3,90 €.
Delivery charge from 5,90 € Oversize package delivery charge from 6,90 €.
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This plant carries a 24 months recovery warranty
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We guarantee the quality of our plants for a full growing cycle, and will replace at our expense any plant that fails to recover under normal climatic and planting conditions.
From 5,90 € for pickup delivery and 6,90 € for home delivery
Express home delivery from 8,90 €.
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The Climbing Max 'Golden Gate' Rose is a superb variety that adds to the available choices in climbing roses. Forming a flowering pyramid from May to October in just a few years, it stands out for its very healthy foliage, vigorous growth, and excellent floribundity, which earned it the prestigious and demanding ADR label awarded in Germany to excellent varieties. Everything is in the nuance of its roses, which are fully double but have a light appearance, an elegant and warm golden yellow colour without being garish, and an astonishing fresh lemon scent. So many qualities combined in one plant are reasons enough to invite it into the garden without hesitation, as long as you like yellow flowers!
The Climbing Max 'Golden Gate' rose represents all the patient work and soulless selection of the Kordes house, renowned for its particularly hardy, floriferous, and disease-resistant creations. The Climbing Max® roses transform the garden into a fabulous floral parade. With their fantastic colours, these versatile climbers are at their best when most long stems are trained horizontally.
Horticulturally speaking, the 'Golden Gate' rose is part of the complex family of cluster-flowered roses. It was bred in 1995 and has also been awarded by the RHS in England, as well as in the Netherlands and Italy. It is a sarmentous rose with exceptional vigour. It has a flexible habit and thorny stems, often reaching heights of 3m (10ft) (sometimes 3.50m (11ft)) with a spread of 1m (3ft), depending on growing conditions. Its deciduous foliage, somewhat glaucous green, is exceptionally healthy and perfectly highlights the gradation of yellow in the flowers, which become a pure yellow shade as they age, slightly lighter. It blooms continuously from May to September, abundantly if it does not lack water. Its large roses, grouped in clusters of 5 to 10 double, slightly fluffy flowers, measuring 8-9 cm (3-4in) in width, are composed of 20 to 39 petals.
Their fragrance, complex, unusual, and captivating, has been described as follows: "the top note initially recalls lime and lemon zest, then freshly picked lemongrass. The heart note evokes an exotic aroma of green banana. Some specimens have a powerful fragrance of tropical flowers. It retains a note of ripe banana that completes its exceptional exotic character".
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The Climbing Max roses deserve a wall exposed to the morning sun or a large enough structure to support their shower of flowers. They allow for sumptuous displays throughout the summer and require very little maintenance, except for regular watering in summer during periods of high heat and prolonged drought. Mix or combine them with easy-to-grow large-flowered clematis like 'Etoile Violette' or 'Broughton Star'. They are good companions for phlox, delphiniums, foxgloves, catmints, annual or perennial sweet peas, and morning glories.
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Plant habit
Flowering
Foliage
Botanical data
Plant the 'Golden Gate' rose from November to March in ordinary, well-prepared, and well-drained soil. Roses prefer clay soils that are rather heavy than light. In soil that is too sandy, compact, or dry in summer, it is preferable to incorporate compost or well-rotted manure at the bottom of the planting hole. However, this rose dreads waterlogged soils in winter. Place it in a sunny location or, at most, in partial shade. Roses are greedy plants so that a rose fertiliser will be beneficial at the start of the growing season and regularly throughout the flowering period. To encourage reblooming, regularly remove faded flowers. Floribunda rose varieties are more vigorous and more floriferous than large-flowered rose varieties. Therefore, trim the stems to about one-quarter of their length (from 4 to 6 eyes from the base of the stem) at the end of winter. Always prune above an outward-facing bud so the bush can bush out, and the branches do not become entangled in the centre of the canopy.
Note: The Golden Gate should be pruned heavily every 5 years due to its exceptional vigour.
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Planting period
Intended location
Care
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Hardiness is the lowest winter temperature a plant can endure without suffering serious damage or even dying. However, hardiness is affected by location (a sheltered area, such as a patio), protection (winter cover) and soil type (hardiness is improved by well-drained soil).
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The flowering period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions located in USDA zone 8 (France, the United Kingdom, Ireland, the Netherlands, etc.)
It will vary according to where you live:
In temperate climates, pruning of spring-flowering shrubs (forsythia, spireas, etc.) should be done just after flowering.
Pruning of summer-flowering shrubs (Indian Lilac, Perovskia, etc.) can be done in winter or spring.
In cold regions as well as with frost-sensitive plants, avoid pruning too early when severe frosts may still occur.
The planting period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions located in USDA zone 8 (France, United Kingdom, Ireland, Netherlands).
It will vary according to where you live:
The harvesting period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions in USDA zone 8 (France, England, Ireland, the Netherlands).
In colder areas (Scandinavia, Poland, Austria...) fruit and vegetable harvests are likely to be delayed by 3-4 weeks.
In warmer areas (Italy, Spain, Greece, etc.), harvesting will probably take place earlier, depending on weather conditions.
The sowing periods indicated on our website apply to countries and regions within USDA Zone 8 (France, UK, Ireland, Netherlands).
In colder areas (Scandinavia, Poland, Austria...), delay any outdoor sowing by 3-4 weeks, or sow under glass.
In warmer climes (Italy, Spain, Greece, etc.), bring outdoor sowing forward by a few weeks.