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Rosa Sally Holmes

Rosa Sally Holmes
Rose

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It's been several orders that I place on this website. I am delighted by the quality of the young plants! There is such a field of plants to choose from... I love it!

Elisabeth , 11/12/2023

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This plant carries a 24 months recovery warranty

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The 'Sally Holmes' rose, with its wild appearance, is a vigorous bush reaching 2 m (6 ft 7 in), blooming again in autumn. It offers single flowers, pink in bud, becoming cream, gathered in large, fragrant clusters.
Flower size
8 cm
Height at maturity
2 m
Spread at maturity
1 m
Exposure
Sun
Hardiness
Hardy down to -23°C
Soil moisture
Moist soil
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Best planting time March, October
Recommended planting time February to November
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Flowering time June to October
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Description

The 'Sally Holmes' Rose is truly different. It is a modern bush rose, highly recurrent, which possesses the charm and simple flowers of botanical roses. Vigorous, with an upright habit and beautiful bright green foliage, ample and shiny, it offers almost continuously generous bouquets of large single flowers like wild roses, of a delicate pale pink colour becoming white when fully open. Original and graceful, it allows, for example, for the formation of a subtly scented rose hedge late in the season.

Rosa 'Sally Holmes', awarded by the RHS in England, is part of the varieties developed by the English rosarian, Holmes, famous for his few but top-notch creations, as with Fairy Snow or 'Fred Loads'. It was introduced to the horticultural market in 1976, the year of the drought that left its mark. Is it a coincidence that it is well adapted to hot climates? It is the result of the marriage between the roses 'Ivory Fashion' and 'Ballerina'. Depending on the pruning it receives in spring, it forms a large bush of 1.8 to 2 m (5 ft 11 in to 6 ft 7 in) in height and 1 m (3 ft 4 in) in width, which can be left free or trained as a small climber. Very branched, vigorous but flexible, it is very thornless and covered with healthy, ample, slightly shiny bright green foliage. It proves to be highly resistant to rose diseases. Its flowering is remarkably long, lasting almost 5 to 6 months. This shrub renews its 8 cm (3.1 in) diameter corollas, composed of 5 to 8 petals, in successive waves from summer until late autumn, forming large terminal bouquets. The well-tightened buds, of a very soft pink colour, open into simple cups barely tinged with pink. They quickly turn ivory-white, all these pastel shades mingling in its bouquets. Their pleasant fragrance is rather light, with musky notes.

'Sally Holmes' dresses a garden in a unique way, to the point that it seems to have always been there. Truly charming and generous, it forms by itself a shrub that is both simple and highly ornamental at the back of a flower bed. It is easy to train on a pole, a small arbour, a slightly shaded wall or a column. In a country hedge, it gets along well with 'Clair matin' and 'Mozart', which have the same temperament. Like other large roses, it is incomparable for giving a little touch of abandonment when planted above overly strict flower beds. It is an ideal companion for an old fruit tree, a small pillar, and cabins to which it gives a crazy charm. Trained on an arch, it will constitute an interesting structural element in an "English-style" garden. As it is easy to maintain a bushy habit, it can also be planted in a mixed hedge, in the company of abelias, Mexican orange trees, spindle trees, or, for example, botanical roses (R.complicata, R. Hansa, R. moyesii).

 

 

Rosa Sally Holmes in pictures

Rosa Sally Holmes (Flowering) Flowering

Plant habit

Height at maturity 2 m
Spread at maturity 1 m
Growth rate normal

Flowering

Flower colour pink
Flowering time June to October
Inflorescence Corymb
Flower size 8 cm
Fragrance slightly scented, musky fragrance
Good for cut flowers Cut flower blooms

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour medium green

Botanical data

Genus

Rosa

Cultivar

Sally Holmes

Family

Rosaceae

Other common names

Rose

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Rootstock

Rosa canina Laxa (3L/4L pot, Wrapped bare root)

Product reference7715442

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Planting and care

To plant your potted rose, work the soil to a depth of 25 cm (9.8 in), crumbling the soil well and placing a bottom compost such as dried blood or horn. Position your plant, freed from its pot, covering the top of the root ball with 3 cm (1.2 in) of soil, fill in the hole and water generously to remove any air pockets. In dry weather, it is necessary to water regularly for a few weeks to facilitate root growth. Also, remember to provide your rose with special rose fertiliser that stimulates plant flowering.

Plant the 'Sally Holmes' rose from November to March in ordinary, well-loosened soil. Roses prefer clayey soils that are rather heavier than light, and rich in nutrients. In soils that are too sandy, compact, or dry in summer, it is advisable to bury loam, decomposed manure, or compost at the bottom of the planting hole. However, this rose is sensitive to waterlogged soils in winter. Place it in a very sunny location, or at most in partial shade in hot climates. Roses are nutrient-demanding plants, and applying specific fertiliser will be beneficial at the start of vegetation and regularly throughout flowering. To encourage re-blooming, regularly remove faded flowers. Floribunda rose varieties are more vigorous and floriferous than large-flowered rose varieties. Therefore, prune the stems to about one-quarter of their length (from 4 to 6 eyes from the base of the stem) in late winter. Always prune above an outward-facing bud to promote bushy growth and prevent branches from intertwining in the centre of the branches.

Roses are often stained or unsightly at the end of summer, but this is not a problem for their development. These stains are not harmful to the rose; it is a natural phenomenon.

Planting period

Best planting time March, October
Recommended planting time February to November

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow, Woodland edge
Type of use Border, Back of border, Free-standing, Climbing
Hardiness Hardy down to -23°C (USDA zone 6a) Show map
Ease of cultivation Beginner
Planting density 3 per m2
Exposure Sun
Soil pH Neutral, Calcareous
Soil type Clayey (heavy), Clayey-chalky (heavy and alkaline), Silty-loamy (rich and light)
Soil moisture Moist soil, rich, soft

Care

Pruning instructions Prune in late winter. Remove dead wood, then rebalance the habit of your rose bush, depending on whether you want to limit its size or train it as a small climber.
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time February to March
Soil moisture Moist soil
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground
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