Readers of this blog already know that I'm partial to many of the roses bred by the late Griffith Buck. It's a sure thing that Professor Buck created a number of marvelous and hardy roses specifically for the Midwest climate, but many of them remain unknown to rosarians in other areas where roses grow easily and large.
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'Carefree Beauty' grows about 4 feet tall in my garden and it's a rose that is not prone to send out new canes, but often has a central "stalk" that just widens and spreads over time. I've rarely seen it without a bloom and the early bloom, as in the picture at the left, will knock your socks off. Rated hardy to Zone 4b, it is completely hardy with no die-back in my Zone 5 garden. It even adds winter interest with a nice display of globular orange hips.
'Carefree Beauty', released in 1977, has received its accolades from many sources. This shrub rose was one of the first named to the Texas A&M EarthKind program (http://aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu/earthkind/roses) and long before that recognition it was a popular rose propagated by the Texas Rose Rustlers with the study name 'Katy Road Pink'. It's also been recommended by the University of Minnesota and as a solidly hardy rose and it was one of 24 roses that "passed the test" in Longwood Garden's Ten-Year Rose Trials (http://longwoodgardens.org/docs/educationalresources/roses.pdf). 'Carefree Beauty' is truly a rose for any garden and any gardener.