logo
8 new varieties of rose bush to choose from as a Mother's Day gift

8 new varieties of rose bush to choose from as a Mother's Day gift

Updated [hour]:[minute] [AMPM] [timezone], [monthFull] [day], [year]
Mother's Day is coming, and the flower and candy ads are everywhere. There's nothing wrong with either, of course, but both are fleeting.
Instead of gifting your mom a bouquet of roses this year, why not give her a plant that will provide blossoms -- and joy -- for years to come?
And if you really want to be her favorite, offer to plant it for her , too (a box of that fleeting candy wouldn't hurt, either.)
Here are eight newly developed rose varieties introduced to the market for the first time this spring, and the brands that grow them for our gardens: Loves Me, Loves Me Not (Star Roses)
This hybrid tea rose puts forth large, 5-inch blooms with up to 250 deep-pink petals apiece. Highly fragrant with a scent reminiscent of lilacs, pineapples and gardenias, the upright, shrubby plant grows to 5 feet tall and 2-3 feet wide in zones 5-11. Winning Streak (Star Roses)
Yellow-striped, cherry-red and fuchsia petals are strikingly set against dark green leaves on this rounded, bushy and compact floribunda. Expect it to grow 2 feet tall and wide in zones 6-11. True Devotion (True Bloom Roses)
Grow this disease-resistant climbing hybrid tea rose against a wall or up an arbor or trellis. Each of its 3 ½-inch, strongly scented flowers is packed with more than 50 light pink petals set against light green foliage. Reaches 7 feet tall and 3 feet wide in zones 5-10. Candy Cream (Altman Plants)
Pink-and-white striped, self-cleaning, double-blossomed roses will bloom all season long on this compact groundcover rose. Suited for smaller spaces (even containers) and offering excellent disease resistance, the vigorous bloomer grows to 2 feet tall and wide in zones 5-10. Flavorette Pear'd (Proven Winners Color Choice)
This fragrant, edible rose is as much a culinary herb as it is a garden specimen. Its pear-flavored, pale pink, semi-double petaled blossoms are held upright on sturdy, disease-resistant plants that reach 3-4 feet tall and wide in zones 4-8. Oso Easy En Fuego (Proven Winners Color Choice)
Large, eye-catching roses emerge yellow and red, then open to reveal a burst of electric orange. Glossy green leaves create a lovely backdrop on the disease-resistant, heat-tolerant plant that blooms from summer to frost. Expect it to grow to 3-4 feet tall and 3 feet wide in zones 4-9. Campfire Floribunda Rose (Jackson & Perkins)
Part of the Canadian Artist Series, this cold-hardy floribunda provides a multicolor display. Red and yellow buds open into deep, rose-edged, golden yellow flowers that mature to pink and ultimately cream. The low-maintenance, 6-foot-tall by 3-foot-wide plant is suitable for beds, borders and containers in zones 3 to 9. Lemon Burst Floribunda Rose (Jackson & Perkins)
Cupped, ruffled, yellow roses with up to 100 petals each exude a light, fruity fragrance and provide long-lasting color to beds, borders and containers. Set against glossy green foliage, its old-fashioned, 3-inch flowers rise from bushy, upright plants with a slightly spreading habit. The disease-resistant plants grow to 4 feet tall and 3 feet wide in zones 5-9.
___
Jessica Damiano writes weekly gardening columns for the AP and publishes the award-winning Weekly Dirt Newsletter. You can sign up here for weekly gardening tips and advice.
___
For more AP gardening stories, go to https://apnews.com/hub/gardening .
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate Brand Unveils Trendmaker Course to Elevate Agent Knowledge
The Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate Brand Unveils Trendmaker Course to Elevate Agent Knowledge

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate Brand Unveils Trendmaker Course to Elevate Agent Knowledge

Trendmaker course empowers affiliated agents with behavioral trends and lifestyle insights from industry leaders and the Better Homes & Gardens media brand MADISON, N.J., Aug. 14, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Following a successful 2024 pilot, the Better Homes and Gardens® Real Estate brand has officially launched its comprehensive Trendmaker℠ Accreditation program for affiliated brokers and agents. The innovative program leverages the brand's unique connection to the iconic Better Homes & Gardens® media brand to deliver actionable insights into the evolving consumer behaviors and lifestyle trends that help shape the housing market. The program formalizes a key BHGRE® brand differentiator by offering agents exclusive access to trend intelligence, psychological insights into buyer behavior, and professional commentary across key real estate-adjacent sectors—including new home construction, smart home technology, and outdoor living. Through the designation course, agents become Home Trend Specialists who have a greater ability to tailor service for their clients based on their design and living preferences. Shop Top Mortgage Rates Your Path to Homeownership A quicker path to financial freedom Personalized rates in minutes Led by President Ginger Wilcox, VP of Learning Karrie-Ann Sheppard, and Director of Brand Marketing Leah Wright, the initiative deepens collaboration with People, Inc., the publisher of the Better Homes & Gardens magazine. Curated content from top industry voices equips agents with practical tools to help enhance service and drive their business forward. "Not only do BHGRE affiliated agents help people find a house, they play a critical role in helping them turn it into their home," said Wilcox. "By connecting the dots between the trusted Better Homes & Gardens brand and highly engaged BHGRE network of affiliated real estate professionals, we're delivering unmatched value to today's lifestyle-driven consumer." Featured Industry Leaders in the Trendmaker Program: Lauren Bengtson, Senior Home Editor, Better Homes & Gardens Caleb Silver, Editor-in-Chief, Investopedia High-Level Takeaways from the Course: Design Trends: Agents gain curated insight into seasonal and emerging home design preferences, sourced from Better Homes & Gardens editors, to help them to advise clients on staging, renovations, and lifestyle fit. Consumer Psychology: The course explores how economic shifts, generational values, and behavioral insights shape buying decisions. Affiliated agents can learn to apply this knowledge to better understand client motivations and personalize their approach throughout the transaction. Marketing Application: Interactive workshops show agents how to turn trend insights into compelling marketing, from social media content to listing presentations, enhancing client engagement and brand visibility. Why It Matters to Clients The TrendmakerSM Accreditation program empowers agents with lifestyle and behavioral insights to better serve today's buyers and sellers. Buyers benefit from professionals who understand how evolving design preferences impact home selection and long-term value, while sellers gain professional guidance on staging strategies that align with current trends. Trendmaker accredited agents deliver a more personalized, insight-driven experience throughout the real estate journey. "The Trendmaker class was incredibly informative," said Nichole Fecteau, real estate agent at Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate The Masiello Group. "Staying ahead of the curve in style and innovation empowers me to better guide my listing clients in preparing their homes for sale and assist new construction buyers in designing their future homes. I left the class with a deeper understanding of home design and the choices that truly make a difference." In addition to the course, the brand has launched bi-monthly snap polls of BHGRE® affiliated agents, providing frontline insights into trends and supporting client engagement. Since its launch in 2008, the Better Homes and Gardens® Real Estate brand has empowered affiliated professionals with deep consumer insights into how buyers and sellers design their homes. The Trendmaker Accreditation program builds on this legacy, reinforcing the brand's commitment to delivering meaningful value at every stage of the real estate journey. About Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate LLC The Better Homes and Gardens® Real Estate network is a dynamic real estate brand that offers a full range of services to brokers, sales associates and home buyers and sellers. Using innovative technology, sophisticated business systems and the broad appeal of a lifestyle brand, the Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate network embodies the future of the real estate industry while remaining grounded in the tradition of home. Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate LLC is a subsidiary of Anywhere Real Estate Inc. (NYSE: HOUS), a global leader in real estate franchising and provider of real estate brokerage, relocation, and settlement services. The growing Better Homes and Gardens® Real Estate network includes approximately 11,000 independent sales associates in approximately 400 offices serving home buyers and sellers across the United States, Jamaica, The Bahamas, Australia, and Türkiye. Better Homes and Gardens®, BHGRE® and the Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate Logo are registered service marks owned by Meredith Operations Corporation and licensed to Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate LLC. Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each office is independently owned and operated. Media Contact: Misty Beard, View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate LLC Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Nets star Michael Porter Jr dishes on what he's looking for in wife: 'Gotta bring something to the table'
Nets star Michael Porter Jr dishes on what he's looking for in wife: 'Gotta bring something to the table'

Fox News

time40 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Nets star Michael Porter Jr dishes on what he's looking for in wife: 'Gotta bring something to the table'

Brooklyn Nets star Michael Porter Jr. opened up in a recent podcast interview about his love life and what he's looking for in a future wife. The Nets acquired the 2023 NBA champion from the Denver Nuggets in a trade in the offseason for Cam Johnson. He started in 77 games last season, averaging 18.2 points per game in one of the best years of his career. The 27-year-old Indiana native spoke about his romantic endeavors on "One Night with Steiny." "My only thing with a girl, you gotta bring something to the table. I don't mind providing for you, I don't mind doing that," he said. "You can stay at the crib, you can do your thing. You gotta bring something to the table. … Positivity, you gotta help me mentally, you gotta be able to cook or something. You gotta bring something to the table … look, what value are you bringing to my life? That's the way I look at it now. "In a wifey, I don't mind if she's a stay-at-home mom. My mom was a stay-at-home mom but she raised all eight of us kids, she homeschooled us, she cooked for us when my dad was out working, she raised us. You gotta be able to do something. These girls nowadays it's like they just want to live like queens and do absolutely nothing." Luckily for Porter, he's going to be in one of the states that's ranked best for singles. WalletHub ranked New York the second-best state for singles overall in February. New York ranked No. 1 for fun and romance, and No. 2 for dating opportunities. If Porter happens to choose to live in New Jersey while he's with the Nets, the state was ranked 11th overall. It was 15th for fun and romance, and eighth for dating opportunities.

Furry Travis Kelce and the great men's grooming debate: To wax, shave or leave body hair be?
Furry Travis Kelce and the great men's grooming debate: To wax, shave or leave body hair be?

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Furry Travis Kelce and the great men's grooming debate: To wax, shave or leave body hair be?

64% of Americans find back hair on men unattractive. Travis Kelce is a lot of things. He's a three-time Super Bowl champion, a family man, a successful podcaster and a famous boyfriend to superstar Taylor Swift. He's also hairy and not shy about it. Photos from the football player's latest GQ profile featured his bearlike appearance. The Kansas City Chiefs tight end was photographed in a Florida swamp driving an ATV, riding in an airboat and cuddling reptiles while wearing couture jackets without shirts, putting his full hairy chest, shoulders and stomach on display. Kelce's back, which did not get captured by the magazine, is also covered in fur, which was revealed when paparazzi pics in May of the 35-year-old sparked headlines, memes and a fresh conversation about male body hair. 'I looked at this [photo] and I'm like, get your back waxed, dude,' comedian Jared Freid shared on an episode of The JTrain Podcast while commenting on trending pop culture conversations. He's one to talk. 'I've been getting waxed once a month for the last 15 years of my life,' Freid tells Yahoo. 'When it comes to grooming, it's a very normal thing.' He's not an anomaly. While not every man talks about it, many trim, shave or wax parts of their body beyond the face. Smooth-chested actors, glossy Calvin Klein models and increasingly groomed beachgoers all hint at the trend. But the grooming conversation still carries stigma, especially when it moves beyond beards and mustaches. The quiet business of men's grooming Whether hair removal is a rare task or a routine, most men are doing it to some capacity. In fact, shaving trends and products are a part of the current boom in the market of men's grooming. The conversation around it, though, can still be touchy. While Gillette ads showing men shaving facial hair have been normalized over the years, examples of hair removal on other parts of the body are seen less often, and mostly as a joke. Take The 40-Year-Old Virgin, for example, where Steve Carell's chest wax was turned into comedy gold. 'That scene is a disservice. It's not that bad,' says Freid, who believes the portrayal of pain and embarrassment has kept men from getting a wax themselves. That doesn't mean that they aren't doing anything about their furry bodies. 'There's still pressure, especially on social media, for men to be hairless,' Patrick Aramouni, a 36-year-old fitness and food influencer, tells Yahoo. 'There's definitely a stigma, mainly because a lot of guys have no idea what they're supposed to do with their body hair.' When he first noticed his own growing at 16 years old, he didn't get any guidance on how to groom it, or if he was even supposed to. Eventually, it was a conversation with a friend that influenced him to do so. 'He insisted that shaving my chest and abs would make me look more ripped ... I gave in,' says Aramouni. TV personality Derek Zagami says classmates teased his early hair growth in middle school, even stuffing razors in his mailbox. His mom would use Nair on his upper lip and brows, but it wasn't until he was swimming competitively that he started removing hair from other parts of his body. 'Obviously, that makes you faster,' the 31-year-old recalls thinking. Now, he enjoys the look of keeping his chest and leg hair trimmed — and he's noticed that other men feel the same, given the appearance of bare arms, legs and backs at the gym. How are they doing it? Zagami has never been a fan of using shaving cream with a razor, but he's graduated from the hair removal cream to an electric shaver. He usually grooms when he has a specific occasion and focuses on keeping hair short, rather than removing it completely. 'I don't like leg hair as much, so I trim it and clean it up a little bit. Chest hair, I hate because you look like you have more weight on you when you're not trimmed,' he says. On a regular basis, he can get away with grooming just the top part of his chest and even focusing on his arms rather than his underarms. But if he's going topless, it's all got to be taken care of. 'I have to call my boyfriend in to do the back.' Zagami has started considering other alternatives like waxing or even lasering certain parts of his body for more permanent hair removal. Freid is ritualistic when it comes to his full back wax. 'I like doing it and I can't see why any man wouldn't,' he says. Back hair remains the most controversial While methods of hair removal are varied, there's one thing that the men I spoke with agreed on: Back hair is a no-go. Hence, the response to Kelce's patchy back. He's far from the only man to be seen with a hairy back, but he stands out in having it on display when people have made their preferences against it known, especially as somebody in the public eye. While a 2021 YouGov poll found that 64% of Americans find back hair on men unattractive, hairless backs shown across popular media had already confirmed how most feel. So much so that Seth Rogen's furry back became a notable part of a sex scene in the movie Neighbors. Aramouni doesn't see that stigma changing. He shows off his well-maintained chest, arm and leg hair on social media, while a shot of his back will reveal that it's bare. 'Honestly, I don't think I'll ever be able to justify having hair on my back,' he says. Freid says back hair makes him feel dirty, and having it waxed off ultimately helps him to feel more confident. 'I know that it's a better day when I get that done,' he says. The bottom line For as many negative reactions to Kelce's back, there were also positive ones normalizing body hair. Even among subreddits dedicated to male grooming, there remains a balance between men who are unbothered by it and those who feel uncomfortable with it. 'In a public setting, it is still more widely acceptable to not have hair in areas like your back as a man,' Andrew Glass, the cofounder of wax brand Wakse, tells Yahoo. 'But I think now with the rise of the dad bod and the Travis Kelces of the world, it's becoming more of an accepted thing.' Still, cultural pressure isn't disappearing. Just as women have long faced beauty standards tied to hair removal, men now navigate their own version — whether they embrace it, quietly maintain it or go fully smooth. For Kelce, the buzz will fade. But for plenty of men, the conversation his back hair sparked is just beginning. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store