Still, every year I do manage to nurture a few annuals and we even have some perennials that are brave enough to visit us every summer. This past Spring while browsing at the garden shop we decided to plant some rose bushes along the back of our house. They didn't cost a lot, so I figured if I killed them it wouldn't be a terrible loss. Funny thing is, that ALMOST happened. When we set the roses and mulched around them we used some grass clippings that had been in a pile at the end of the driveway. All was well until a period of two weeks in June when we had a lot of rain and I didn't go in the back yard at all. Someone else was cutting my lawn for me and I just got busy and didn't go back there. When I finally did, I found a big surprise. The grass under the mulch had sprouted! With all the rain it grew like crazy and overtook my poor rose buses. And on top of that, cut worms had attacked two of the bushes. One was chewed to the ground and the other was almost gone. It took a LOT of weed-pulling to even discover their demise. Mike and I worked really hard while he was home for leave before going overseas and pulled all the weeds and fixed my pitiful rose garden. We treated the remaining four bushes with insecticide and waited to see if they would live.
I am happy to report that they not only survived but they have grown into large bushes full of rose blooms! They look awesome. We've had some chilly nights this week in the 30s and its time for me to figure out how to bed them down for the winter. So I figured if I want any photos I should do it before they freeze. It was nearly dark and I didn't use a flash so they aren't the best, but I wanted to play with the macro settings. Check out my pretty roses!
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEio3g0CfZqQwqJqxfpxQBZv6W-b2eeIy0wpAgi4TgPyDPcoxlBTeluaoynRkkEsCJ1ZpRB0H0falFw3q_0FiQEEX8eZmUgoE9PsJeEgKDiIwIcE-ZGTuslYPU64WKmTj2Y5Co6OTWJyWSo/s320/roses.jpg)