Growing Roses

Growing Roses in Minnesota: Tough Beauty for the Bold North

Roses may seem like high-maintenance divas, but Minnesota gardeners know better. With the right varieties and a few smart habits, roses can be some of the most reliable, rewarding plants in a northern garden. Our climate rewards toughness, and fortunately, plenty of roses fit the bill.

Start With the Sure Bets: Hardy Shrub Roses

These are the roses that behave like Minnesotans: resilient, unbothered by cold snaps, and generous with color.

  • Canadian Explorer roses — Exceptionally hardy (Zone 3) and diseaseresistant.
  • Parkland series — Compact, floriferous, and bred for prairie climates.
  • Northern Accents® — Developed by the University of Minnesota: ‘Sven,’ Ole,’ and ‘Lena’ are local favorites.
  • Rugosa roses — Nearly indestructible, fragrant, and tolerant of poor soil and road salt.

If You Want Classic Rose Form

You can still enjoy hybridtea style blooms without the winter drama.

  • Easy Elegance® — Hybridtea looks with shrubrose toughness.
  • Knock Out® — Longblooming and lowmaintenance.
  • Carefree Beauty — A Buck rose developed at Iowa State University, with big blooms and strong fragrance.

Common Rose Diseases in Minnesota (and How to Handle Them)

Minnesota’s humidity and cool nights can invite a few predictable issues, but most hardy shrub roses resist them.

  • Black spot — Dark leaf spots with yellowing. Remove infected leaves, water at the base, and improve airflow.
  • Powdery mildew — White coating on leaves. Prune for airflow and water in the morning.
  • Rose rust — Orange pustules under leaves. Remove affected foliage and avoid overhead watering.
  • Cane dieback — Stems brown from the tips. Prune to healthy tissue and plant grafts 1–2 inches deep.
  • Botrytis blight — Buds brown and fail to open. Remove affected buds and improve air circulation.

Before You Pick a Rose… Go See These Gardens

  • Minnesota Landscape Arboretum — 3675 Arboretum Dr, Chaska Large, diverse rose collections, including hardy shrub roses and UMN trial plantings.
  • Lyndale Park Rose Garden — 4124 Roseway Rd, Minneapolis (near Lake Harriet) Minnesota’s oldest public rose garden; 3,000+ roses in classic formal beds.
  • Clemens Gardens — 1600 Kilian Blvd SE, St. Cloud The Virginia Clemens Rose Garden features pergolas, brick walkways, and more than 1,000 roses.
  • Munsinger Gardens — 1515 Riverside Dr SE, St. Cloud Mixed perennial borders along the Mississippi with hardy roses woven throughout.

The Bottom Line

Minnesota gardeners don’t need to shy away from roses. With hardy varieties and a little earlyseason attention, roses become some of the toughest, most satisfying plants in the yard, proof that beauty and resilience grow side by side in the Bold North.

For more news from U of M Extension, visit www.extension.umn.edu/news or contact Extension Communications at extdigest@umn.edu. University of Minnesota Extension is an equal opportunity educator and employer.

By University of Minnesota Extension

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