Read about roses, talk to other gardeners about growing them, and insect and disease problems seem inevitable.
Problems begin in the spring, with chewed leaves. No great harm, except that the plants begin to look ragged. This raggedness is mostly a problem if your roses are planted prominently in view, which makes a good case for planting roses in a dedicated cutting garden, just for their cut flowers.
The cause of those ragged leaves early on is rose chafer, a tan beetle with long, spiny legs. Fortunately, the chafer is up and about for only three or four weeks. Sit out the damage and perky, new leaves will eclipse the chewed ones.
In bad years, handpicking, a temporary cheesecloth fence or insecticide spray could be called for.
INSECT PESTS GALORE
Aphids follow on the heels of the chafers, congregating at the tips of stems. That's too bad for the aphids, because perched out there on the stems they are easy to crush between your thumb and forefinger, or to blast away with a stream of water from the hose.
Even if you ignore aphids, they usually disappear due to diseases and predators before doing significant damage.
Next in line come the two problems most dreaded by rose growers everywhere:
The first is the Japanese beetle, which causes similar damage as the chafer except that it and its handiwork become most evident later, about now. Plucking or knocking beetles off plants into soapy water in the cool of the morning checks them, as do pesticides, of course, or trying to infect the grub stage with "milky spore disease."
Japanese beetles have their good years and bad. Good years (for them) follow a previous summer of adequate rain making for lush lawns. The beetles then have an easy time laying eggs, and the grubs have plenty of grass roots on which to feed. Unless, of course, you apply the milky spore disease to kill the grubs, something all your neighbors also must do because otherwise the adult beetles can just fly from neighbors' yards over to yours.
HOW ABOUT A FEW DISEASES?
The other big problem threatening roses is black spot disease. The name tells all: black spots on the leaves which, as leaves die, are surrounded by yellowed areas.
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