Rosa stylosa
Short-Styled Field-rose · Columnar-styled dog rose · Short-styled field rose · Styled rose · Field Rose
Description
Source: wikipedia (CC BY-SA)Rosa stylosa, the short-styled field rose, is a species of flowering plant in the family Rosaceae, native to western and southern Europe, and northwestern Africa. It has gone extinct in Hungary. It is not readily available from commercial suppliers.
Care Guide
💧 Water
☀️ Light Full sun
Short-styled field rose is native to open habitats, such as sunny meadows and forest edges, where abundant light is available. It does best in Full Sun but can also tolerate Partial Sun, adapting well to different sunlight conditions.
🌡️ Temperature 5–35°C
The short-styled field rose is highly adaptable to a wide range of climates, from blazing summers to frosty winters. Nevertheless, it has a preferred temperature range for optimal growth. If temperatures climb too high, the plant is vulnerable to heat and humidity stress, which can kill it. In areas where temperatures approach the lower limit of its cold tolerance, insulating measures should be used to protect the plant.
💨 Humidity
🪴 Soil 6-8
🌱 Fertilizer
Timing is essential when fertilizing the Short-styled field rose. Fertilize in early spring and continue once a month until early summer. The fertilizer encourages beautiful blooms and supplies energy during both dormancy and active growth.
🪴 Pot & Repot
✂️ Pruning
🌿 Propagating
🐛 Diseases & pets
☠️ Toxicity
Characteristics
- Plant Type
- Shrub
- Life Cycle
- Perennial
- Genus
- Rosa
- Family
- Rosaceae
- Hardiness Zone
- 5-9
- Mature Height
- 0.91 m to 3.05 m
- Mature Spread
- 0.91 m to 2.13 m
- Leaf Color
- Green, Dark Green
- Leaf Type
- Deciduous
- Flower Color
- Pink, White
- Flower Size
- 4.06 cm to 6.35 cm
- Bloom Time
- Late spring, Early summer, Mid summer
- Planting Time
- Spring, Summer
- Harvest Time
- Late summer, Early fall, Mid fall
- Native Area
- Germany, Portugal, Austria, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Ireland, United Kingdom, Hungary, Algeria, Morocco, Belgium, France