A few additional thoughts:
1) zoomless lens = prime lens
2) Another way to get more of the frame in-focus that you'd otherwise see is to use a tilt-shift lens. What this kind of lens does is allow you to alter the plane of focus.
If you imagine the plane of focus (segment of the photo in-focus and sharp) to be like a book - the thickness of the pages is the depth of field. Now on a regular lens the plane of focus is parallel to the front of the lens; however with a tilt shift lens you can adjust the plane of focus, you can tilt it so that it covers a different angle. This can allow you to get some really creative effects with depth of field (if you google tilt shift you'll see lots of those classic landscape shots that look like miniature models taken with a macro lens).
For a shot like the one above it probably wouldn't work because everything is still on the same plane - the rose bush is covering the shot top to bottom.
2) Focus stacking. This is a method where by you take a series of photos at fixed settings, but where between each one you change the focus point by a tiny amount each time. This is so that each shot overlaps its depth of field with the shot before, but at the same time is including a new segment of the scene in the plane of focus. You then use software to automatically blend the shots together which gives you an increased apparent depth of field.
The bonus here is you can use a wide aperture and get a blurry background and yet still keep a deep depth of field; or you can use it so that you can use the sharpest aperture without sacrificing depth of field in the shot.
Zerine Stacker - Helicon Focus and Combine ZP (this last one is free to use) are all software packages you can use to stack - Photoshop CS5 also has its own stacking option.
It's typically used by macro photographers but can be used any static scene and subject (if it moves around the blending will likely fail).
Both those methods are not necessarily going to work on this kind of shot, however they are alternative ways in which you can manipulate the depth of field.
Like its said above I suspect that this shot is the result of a collage. Combining multiple photos into a single composite photo.