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You are viewing a single post made by Rugosa in the thread called Hardiness of various Rugosa cultivars.
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Sep 28, 2016 7:49 PM CST
Name: Rob
(Zone 4b)
Probably a silly question, but nonetheless... :)

Here in Alaska we have an abundance of Rugosa rubras (rubrae?), commonly referred to around here as 'Sitka roses' because of their introduction to that area long ago. In my experience they are pretty much indestructible--I've seen them stripped by moose, burned in house and wild fires, run over with brush hogs, planted north of Fairbanks (as in above the Arctic Circle in -60F/-70F winters), you name it--and they inevitably come back. I love them for their scent, hardiness (go figure :)) and the fact that they make a fantastic organic barrier to anyone who thinks about climbing in an open window with one planted underneath...

Most of the greenhouses/big box stores carry only this variety; it's rare to see any of the albas or agnes varieties, but when you do they almost never seem to survive the winter in spite of being listed as hardy as others in the family. I once heard Rugosas in general referred to as "thriving on neglect" which they certainly seem to do, so long as they're the rubra variety. The others, not so much...

While I've no burning desire to lose my collection of rubras and their color and scent, is there any particular trick to cultivating the other varieties this far north and having them survive the winter, all else (soil, proximity to structures, shelter, etc.) being the same?

Thanks!

Rob in AK

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