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Rose Bonfire Night in the GardenTags plant encyclopedia

Rosa 'Bonfire Night'

 

Rose 'Bonfire Night'

'Bonfire Night' is a bushy floribunda rose with thorny stems bearing pinnate leaves divided into glossy, toothed, dark green leaflets and clusters of lightly fragrant, semi-double flowers. The modern Floribunda roses are a cross between the dwarf polyantha rose and the early hybrid tea roses. Hardy deciduous shrubs with stems more branched than those of the hybrid teas and variably prickly with hooked thorns. Flowers may be single, double or semi-double and are borne in large terminal clusters during mid-summer and usually again in late summer. A few are fragrant.

 
plant Features
  • Rose Bonfire Night likes full sun

    Full sun

  • Rose Bonfire Night likes occasional watering

    Occasional watering

  • Rose Bonfire Night is full frost hardy: 5f (-15°c)

    Full Frost Hardy: 5F (-15°C)

  • Rose Bonfire Night likes rich and free draining

    Rich and free draining

 
plant information

Common name

Rose 'Bonfire Night'

Latin name

Rosa 'Bonfire Night'

type

Deciduous Perennial

family

Rosaceae

ph

5.0 - 8.0 Acid - Neutral

  • Light

    Rose Bonfire Night likes full sun

    Full sun

  • Frost

    Rose Bonfire Night is full frost hardy: 5f (-15°c)

    Full Frost Hardy: 5F (-15°C)

  • Soil

    Rose Bonfire Night likes rich and free draining

    Rich and free draining

  • Water

    Rose Bonfire Night likes occasional watering

    Occasional watering

Plant & bloom calendar

  •  
    Best time to plant

full grown dimensions

The size of a fully grown Rose Bonfire Night is 0.50meters x 0.90meters 0.50 M 0.90 M

Rosa 'Bonfire Night'

'Bonfire Night' is a bushy floribunda rose with thorny stems bearing pinnate leaves divided into glossy, toothed, dark green leaflets and clusters of lightly fragrant, semi-double flowers. The modern Floribunda roses are a cross between the dwarf polyantha rose and the early hybrid tea roses. Hardy deciduous shrubs with stems more branched than those of the hybrid teas and variably prickly with hooked thorns. Flowers may be single, double or semi-double and are borne in large terminal clusters during mid-summer and usually again in late summer. A few are fragrant.


Planting

From Late Autumn TO Late Spring

Prepare the planting site by digging over the bed and incorporate liberal quantities of well rotted manure or compost; lighten heavy clay soil with half rotted straw. Dress the top soil with plenty of peat mixed with hop manure and chopped up turf. Fresh animal manure is harmful to the roots and should only be used in the bottom spit. Where possible, prepare the planting site a few weeks in advance. Do this in late summer for planting in autumn. Plant at any time between late autumn and late spring. Prepare a planting mixture of bone meal and moist peat. Spread out the roots in the planting hole and add the planting mixture until the roots are covered. Add soil and firm in the plant by treading.

 
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