|
| Does anybody have any experience of this first generation HT growing in a med climate? In particular I would like to know how it's growth pattern and its suitability for training is and whether it is susceptible to PM. Can it also be grown as a self supporting large 'drooping' bush? Also will it tolerate some shade? Between this and its tea parent Niphetos which one would you recommend (though I'm not sure how easy Niphetos would be to source)? Nik |
This post was edited by nikthegreek on Thu, Jan 23, 14 at 2:40
Follow-Up Postings:
|
- Posted by nikthegreek 9b/10a E of Athens (My Page) on Thu, Jan 23, 14 at 8:39
| Since nobody has answered yet, I'm expanding this question. I plan to order Mrs Stevens along with the following roses, in fact I was about to press the button but I came to my senses and thought I should check here first: Ghislaine de Feligonde Do you think of any reason why I should not get one of these roses? Are they all suited to my med climate? Are any of them PM magnets? Am I going broke? |
This post was edited by nikthegreek on Thu, Jan 23, 14 at 12:40
|
- Posted by PortlandMysteryRose 8 (My Page) on Thu, Jan 23, 14 at 12:26
| Nik Wish my climate were similar, but I'd hate to mislead you by referring to any of the above roses in the three climates where I've gardened--north central TX, Minnesota, Portland, OR. Maybe Jeri and Kim could be helpful? If I were you, I'd tag a post with their names before ordering...just to stay on budget. I'm pretty frugal but notorious for straying off budget, rosewise. :-) Carol |
|
| Nik, I somehow have the feeling that Ghislaine de Feligonde is not tremendously remontant, but I haven't grown it and I know others here have it who can tell you about it much more accurately. Not all of the hybrid musks bloom like crazy. My Penelope was a little slow in that department, and also didn't give me that wow factor, but of course that's an individual thing. I like Cornelia much more, but then I'm a "pink rose" person. I wouldn't sneeze at a white rose that looks marvelous and blooms a lot, though. Ingrid |
|
- Posted by damask55linen none (My Page) on Thu, Jan 23, 14 at 20:05
| This is speculation Nik; my favorite nursery (zone 5 ) had Ghislaine last year, but is not carrying it this year. You probably already know the pictures are really wonderful, could GdF not have done too well in comparison to the other roses? in the photos the blossoms are gorgeous but in actuality they are small. it is a beautiful little rose on a big bush. |
|
- Posted by nikthegreek 9b/10a E of Athens (My Page) on Fri, Jan 24, 14 at 0:16
| Hi all, thanks for the info. Still undecided.. Ingrid, I was thinking of treating Ghislaine as a remontant smaller and lighter rambler so to speak. If it can grow onto some lower but spreading bushes of Pistacia lentiscus (mastic tree) I have (and can't, legally, get rid of..) and gain some height on the chainlink fence I think it would do for me. However, I would expect some remontancy at least in the form of an adequate fall flush. If either is not what she's good in doing I will not consider it. Similarly with the Pemberton musks on this list. Also, what about Felicia? |
This post was edited by nikthegreek on Fri, Jan 24, 14 at 0:39
|
- Posted by melissa_thefarm NItaly (My Page) on Fri, Jan 24, 14 at 0:41
| Cl. Mrs. Herbert Stevens Ghislaine de Feligonde Cornelia Penelope Mme. Jules Gravereaux I have all these roses in the garden except for the last, though mostly poorly grown. All are desirable beautiful roses, valuable as shrubs as well as for the blooms. My CMHS is a grafted plant in poor ground--I haven't succeeded in rooting it--that holds its own and has lovely flowers. I don't know how often it would rebloom if it were watered during dry spells and were in better ground. I think you might be able to grow it as a big stiff shrub, possibly with some support. I'm not overly fond of 'Ghislaine de Feligonde', simply because I have it in the middle of mostly once-blooming old roses of European origin, and its glossy light green foliage and smooth canes stick out like a sore thumb. Good plant--mine is a shrub--can handle adversity, easy to root; as usual, I can't speak as to rebloom because I don't water during drought. It would assort well with the Pemberton Hybrid Musks you list, for example. I heard somewhere that it is somewhat susceptible to canker, and in fact I pruned off a cankered cane last year. I adore ALL the Pemberton Hybrid Musks: excellent fine shrubs, good foliage, sweet fragrance. They tend to bloom spring and fall, and can be particularly lovely during the fall bloom. In my experience 'Penelope' is more shrubby, while 'Cornelia' has lax canes and if grown as a shrub is much wider than tall, or can be trained as a small climber. I've let my Hybrid Musks go, not pruning out old canes annually for renewal, and the sad result is that they're very run down now; and two wet winters in heavy soil haven't done them any good, either. So you need to keep after the pruning. In my climate they do best in part shade and in the cooler parts of the garden, and they don't like very heavy soil either. This is a big problem for me: so much of my garden is sun-blasted and windswept, with pottery clay as soil. Hybrid Musks don't like these conditions, so I have difficulty siting them. But they're glorious roses. About mildew, I don't remember seeing it on 'Ghislaine', while the others I think get it in moderation in certain seasons, but not enough to compromise them. I don't spray, and accept that many of my roses are going to get some mildew in the summer. It's unsightly but doesn't do any particular harm. Actually 'Cornelia' may not get it. Lest I not have made this clear, all these roses are, in my opinion, good to have in the garden. Almost certainly 'Mme. Jules Gravereaux' as well, but I can't speak from my own experience. Melissa P.S. Nik, I just saw your message. 'Felicia' is shrubby in my garden, not as distinctive a plant, in my opinion, as 'Cornelia', but if such a thing is possible with an even better scent. You might also consider 'Pax' and 'Francesca', both with possibilities as climbers, beautiful plants and blooms. They require the same conditions as the other Hybrid Musks. |
This post was edited by melissa_thefarm on Fri, Jan 24, 14 at 0:48
|
| Hi Nik, I guess Sydney is somewhat similar in climate, except that we get very heavy dumps of rain from time to time. |
|
| I had never even seen canker in my garden until GdF appeared. What a mess. Because it grows in a typical multiflora way (loads of canes from the base), it occupies a much larger footprint than I would have liked and is also a horrible trial - endless cutting off and snipping whole canes which have become entirely girdled - great chunks of shrivelled dying rose foliage - I hate it and am simply allowing Schoener's nutkana and Tolstoi to bury it out of sight. Penelope has been another iffy rose - it lacks any of the symmetry of other hybrid musks, throwing one or two long stiff canes in unwanted directions and the blooms are ephemeral to say the least although, as a caveat, I am at fault here since it is uncomfortably wedged into a corner with a couple of low growing Lens roses (Matchball, Sibelius) in front - I suspect it would be much happier grown more as a standalone specimen. I am also revising my opinion of hybrid musks in general - they truly are much happier in clay and resent my sandy, silty loam, getting mildewy as the season wears on....in the ones with dark new growth such as Moonlight, this is a serious deficiency. Buff Beauty is STILL basically one cane despite lavishing care and attention, careful pruning and training (I am letting the thalictrums have their head and simply grow over and through BB as it will never turn into a swan in my garden), I feel. Originally, I adored them as having that slightly ragamuffin air of untidy exuberance but they will not be going to the woods (also sandy, shelly soil)....although I will be going a little further back in the lineage and attempting Trier and Aglaia, along with more sweet briars such as Amy Robsart, Lord Penzance at al. It might be because I am faced with a massive transplanting project but I am looking at ALL my plants with a more cynical and critical eye these days. Out of over 100 roses, there will be probably less than a couple of dozen I bother taking with me or reproducing from cuttings (but on the other hand, I fully intend to engage in the world of huge ramblers). |
|
- Posted by daisyincrete 10? (My Page) on Fri, Jan 24, 14 at 8:23
| Nik, I have Cornelia. She definitely wants to be a climber in my garden. She is planted against a derelict, neighbouring house. North facing. She does get some PM here, but not a lot and I am hoping she will grow out of it. She has only been planted 3 years. Daisy |
|
- Posted by nikthegreek 9b/10a E of Athens (My Page) on Fri, Jan 24, 14 at 8:50
| Thank you all. I can now say I'm more confused than ever... Maybe I shouldn't have asked? This rose selection business is so confusing especially if one doesn't have local references. Taking the plunge 1, taking the plunge 2, taking the plunge 3, entering CC info, approved, done!!! Just bought bareroot grafted top-price Cornelia, Mme Stevens and Mme Jules, accompanied with one Evelyn just to make P&P from the UK appear a tad cheaper.... Let's just hope there will be one rose amongst them I won't regret getting. |
This post was edited by nikthegreek on Fri, Jan 24, 14 at 8:54
|
- Posted by melissa_thefarm NItaly (My Page) on Fri, Jan 24, 14 at 9:50
| You'll just become the local expert, Nik. Someone has to do it. Melissa |
|
| Daisy, your Cornelia is really lovely! Also, Nik- if you want to expand upon your collection of Hybrid Musks, I would tell you to strongly consider growing Buff Beauty. Gorgeous rose, with a lovely tea-scent. |
|
- Posted by nikthegreek 9b/10a E of Athens (My Page) on Fri, Jan 24, 14 at 11:11
| Thanks zjw, I planted BB a couple of months ago. Nik |
|
| Ho Nik, 'fraid you will get impassioned highly partisan views here....as well as many carefully considered responses. It is difficult though, because our gardens are unique to each of us. Melissa, who grows many more roses than I do and knows heaps more about them, says her HMs are unhappy on clay....whereas I was equally convinced mine did not enjoy the sandy soil on my plot. Truth is, there are so many factors to consider - heat, humidity, soil types, companion plants, aspect, positioning, care regimes (mine are always a bit scrappy, to be honest which is why I gravitate towards species). I often suspect that the fault is more with the grower (definitely if it is myself) rather than the rose (and having seen such glorious Buff Beauties compared to my weedy one cane wonder, it is not surprising). Is replant syndrome an issue for you? It still is in the UK so I tend to be more circumspect because if I grow a failed rose, I cannot easily plant another in the same spot....which means I either put up with the flaws or leave gaps for something else (but mainly, because I am a bit cheap, I often just avert my eyes when the blackspot hits). I sorta envy the moveable feast of rose-growing in the US. In truth, if you really don't like something, is it such a disaster....or is it another chunk of education we are getting for the cost of a rose? Oh yeah - Mrs Herbert Stevens - there used to be one against the side of the greenhouse at my local college. My lecturer, who had a lifetime of working in the rose industry, rated it as one of the very best climbing HTs that maintained the delicacy and refinement of teas while coping with the vagaries of english weather - prickly bugger though. |
|
- Posted by nikthegreek 9b/10a E of Athens (My Page) on Fri, Jan 24, 14 at 11:51
| Camps, learning through mistakes is OK as long as you don't get broke and get a bit of enjoyment from success in the process. No idea if rose replant syndrome exists on my soil. Have never planted a rose in place of another one and I'n not sure I would recognize the issue if I saw it. However farmers in my country are advised of issues with some stone fruit trees and citrus. There are other cross-species issues as well, too numerous to keep in mind. Did you know that you shouldn't plant olive trees where cotton used to be grown before 5 years have passed? No? I didn't think you would! lol PS For rose replant issues have you tried the cardboard box method? |
|
| Hi Nik, Good luck with your purchases. My soil is clay, with around 6" of loam on top. My roses seem to love it, I've never had them grow so big. Daisyincrete, I think your photo is beautiful, but I think it's Cornelia the noisette, not the HM. I would have to agree with Campanula, so far Penelope is an awkward looking plant, and BB is back to being a one-cane wonder since its altercation with the plumber. Trish. |
|
| It is lovely Daisy....and forgive, I don't think it is Cornelia either ...although I don't think it is the noisette either. Its the buds, I think - just look a bit pale rather than the really quite deep coral colour? D'y think yours could possibly be Felicia? I have seen both of them go into a climb-y mode. I am rubbish at identification so pinch of salt, obviously. |
|
- Posted by daisyincrete 10? (My Page) on Sat, Jan 25, 14 at 0:22
| Forgive me Nik for highjacking your thread, but just to reply to Trish and Campanula about my rose in the photo. I ordered Felicia. A rose labelled Felicia was delivered, but when it first flowered, I could see that it was unlike all the Felicias I had grown in England. The flowers were smaller. They were held in bigger trusses and the growth was slim and pliable. My Felicias in England, had always been stiff, strong and upright. When I asked Peter Beales about it, they thought that they had possibly, mistakenly sent Cornelia. It did look like a lot of the photos of Cornelia on the internet, so I accepted that it was she. Now I don't know. She is not at all like the Felicias I had known, so she is a mystery rose. Daisy |
|
- Posted by nikthegreek 9b/10a E of Athens (My Page) on Sat, Jan 25, 14 at 0:55
| BTW I don't think that PB grows the noisette so it couldn't be it either. I do think that it looks more like Cornelia (HM) than Felicia, only judging by pics of course. I don't think anyone can judge just by the colour shade in a graded colour rose. Too many factors can affect it. Maybe it is the cretan climate? Maybe the alkaline soil? Maybe it has grown a root into the raki barrel? Nik |
This post was edited by nikthegreek on Sat, Jan 25, 14 at 1:18
|
- Posted by daisyincrete (My Page) on Sat, Jan 25, 14 at 7:22
| "Maybe it has grown a root into the raki barrel?" |
This post was edited by daisyincrete on Sat, Jan 25, 14 at 7:25
|
- Posted by nikthegreek 9b/10a E of Athens (My Page) on Sat, Jan 25, 14 at 8:16
| Daisy I use it mostly to sterilize my inards from the bacteria life is giving me. Nik |
Please Note: Only registered members are able to post messages to this forum. If you are a member, please log in. If you aren't yet a member, join now!
Return to the Antique Roses Forum
Information about Posting
- You must be logged in to post a message. Once you are logged in, a posting window will appear at the bottom of the messages. If you are not a member, please register for an account.
- Please review our Rules of Play before posting.
- Posting is a two-step process. Once you have composed your message, you will be taken to the preview page. You will then have a chance to review your post, make changes and upload photos.
- After posting your message, you may need to refresh the forum page in order to see it.
- Before posting copyrighted material, please read about Copyright and Fair Use.
- We have a strict no-advertising policy!
- If you would like to practice posting or uploading photos, please visit our Test forum.
- If you need assistance, please Contact Us and we will be happy to help.
Learn more about in-text links on this page here







