Due to the unusually warm November that we had on Long Island, many of us had roses in our gardens almost into December. But eventually our plants decided to call a halt to sending out blooms and began to offer us yet another dimension of botanical beauty in the garden—rose hips. Wildlife is attracted to our gardens, if we provide them food and shelter. One food we can offer songbirds and small mammals is the nutritious rose hip. Hips provide wildlife a good source of vitamin C and needed proteins throughout the fall and winter.
The bonus of the rose hips (carriers of the seeds for future propagation and breeding) is that they are also valuable for other purposes; they are utilized in crafts, foods and to enliven the winter landscape. Gardeners who have culinary skills often make their own jams and specialty herbal teas with rose hips. Frequently, rosarians intentionally resist the temptation to deadhead their roses in the fall (removing the spent flower heads as they wilt) in order to provide a natural food source for both migrating and resident birds as well as other animals.
Different varieties of roses produce hips that vary in shape (round, oval, pumpkin, flask and bottle), size (from tiny to very large) and color (ranging from lemon yellow to violet-black). If you wish to grow roses that will produce beautiful hips, the old-fashioned and species roses offer the greatest variety of hips. Many roses are good hip producers; however, some of the best hips are on the species roses, old garden roses and shrub roses.
Rugosa and Hybrid Rugosa roses produce large numbers of flowers and therefore many rose hips which are large, tomato-shaped hips with relatively thin skin.
Since the birds are very fond of eating rose hips throughout the winter months, please remember not to use any chemicals on your roses but particularly on Rugosa roses because they do not tolerate spraying well and will blacken and die. The newer Knockout rose series also produce multitudinous flowers and hips, though they are often quite diminutive in size.
Here are some star hip-bearing performers of different shrub sizes that can fit into any garden: Schneezwerg, a hybrid Rugosa that is a pure white, disease resistant, very fragrant rose that grows to three feet and flowers continuously throughout the summer; Frau Dagmar Hartopp, a hybrid Rugosa that is light pink, fragrant, grows to five feet and flowers continuously; and Dortmund, a hybrid Kordesii that is a disease resistant crimson with white throat rose that grows to eight feet or more causing gardeners to train it as a climbing rose. It makes an impressive splash in the back of a border and is repeat blooming.
The Long Island Horticultural Society meets on Sunday afternoon, with doors opening at 1:30 p.m. at Planting Fields Arboretum in Oyster Bay. During January through March, the organization meets in the Hay Barn building. The next meeting is Feb. 21. The speaker is Rusty Schmidt, landscape ecologist at Nelson, Pope & Voorhis. His topic will be “Playing in the Rain within a Rain Garden.”
For more information, go to www.lihort.org.