22,795 Garden Web Discussions | Roses

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countrygirl_sc, Upstate SC(7a)

I was just at one of my local Lowe's and they had one rose that looked like some kind of mini. I mean they had one rose. that was it. Most of the local Lowe's and Home Depots have just had lots of knockouts with very few other roses, if any. Fourth of July is on my wish list.

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summersrhythm_z6a

It was a huge clearence rose with BS...... :-) I might let it climbing on a tree by the street. I hope someone here can make it to the sale, a great deal! It's really nice of you to let everyone know. :-)

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barbarag_happy

I now have a rose garden with an actual design, all thanks to a happy accident. We bought a house with a small round aboveground pool right outside the breakfast nook bay window. It was circled with bark mulch and a nice edging on one side, and a stone patio on another. Took up the pool, dug a big doughnut-shaped bed with a small circle bed in the center. You enter off the patio and can walk on the bark among all the roses. The back half is somewhat shady and consists of the Fairy, Vanity, Darlow's Enigma, Blush Noisette. I have one big plant of Lavender Dream in the center. The back is against a split rail fence, and one side has a wood panel fence. I have pots lined up opposite the bay window for extra color-- Carefree Sunshine, Cubana, Rita Levi Montalcini. I'd like to add South Africa and Valencia but not sure they'd be happy with my no-spray.

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barbarag_happy

Oops, I meant Sunshine Daydream.

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nanadollZ7 SWIdaho(Zone 7 Boise SW Idaho)

I don't know the McCartney Rose, but yours sure matches the HMF photos. I have Frederic Mistral, an offspring of the MR, and both roses are known for their strong, gorgeous scent. I'm betting it's the MR. Diane

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rosecanadian

I was leaning towards that...but now I think it might be Sleeping Beauty.

Sleeping Beauty has white at the base of the petals, and when the flower is open you can see white.

Now mine happened to fall apart before I could see a white center...BUT...each petal had a little bit of white at the base.

Does anyone have The McCartney Rose and notice if the petals are pink all the way down or if it has white at the base?? My new TMR is between blooms right now - so I can't check it.

Thanks!

Carol

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bethnorcal9

Beautiful!

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sutekesh Switzerland(6a)

That's lovely - I am still waiting to see a Bloom like that! Maybe with the cooler weather they have predicted for Tuesday onwards.

Sharlene

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rosecanadian

Wow!!! That would be quite the impressive resume to fulfill that description.

That was interesting, Henry.

Carol

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kentucky_rose zone 6

Sara-Ann, I got Poseidon this year from Palatine, also. My blooms did not open properly, but are finally improving. I don't know if it was the wetness, lack of sun, and/or thrips? But this evening I was noticing much nicer blooms. Poseidon is thriving, tall, and very healthy.

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Prettypetals_GA_7-8

I'm super excited too Sara Ann. We too got lots of rain and everything looks gorgeous. Roses are loaded with buds. My Poseidon has been super strange all year. Im getting some pretty blooms this year but good gravy its been a strange year for it. Hoping your net flush of them is nice because its gorgeous. I'm getting a good flush right now. Judy

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SoFL Rose z10

Hi Sharon,

I have used the Montery spray with good results. I would try that before doing anything else. They sell it on Amazon and the small bottle is good for maybe 4 doses, depending on how large your garden is.

I would then use the Bayer granules to help prevent a re-infestation. I don't think it lists chili thrips on the list of insects, but Geoff from Cool Roses recommends it as a means to control them, maybe not eliminate them all together, but it keeps them from forming a major infestation.

I have used it with good results, maybe an 80% reduction, not %100, but a number I can definitely live with.

Also, has anyone use the thrip pheromone lures with any success? I read about these on amazon and I think they are a good idea, but they are a bit pricey ($20 for a few strips) and I'm not sure they'll work on Chili Thrips, but it seems like a good idea. I'd like to give it a try soon.

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Brittie - La Porte, TX 9a

Lol, I didn't notice the autocorrect fail in my post. Espinosa? Geez.

I have around 200 roses, and only use conserve after I spy early damage. I use the amount directed on the bottle.

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Patty W. zone 5a Illinois

Thanks prairie... Thats the thread that made me look for this rose. What with the last two polar winters I've longed to have some cane left again. I also have a few seriously raised beds that I was having a difficult time finding a hardy enough rose for. So I spent time this winter reading the far north forum. Now we need a Campfire in several other colors. -)

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Patty W. zone 5a Illinois

Onewheeler... Maybe it doesn't have to last to awfully long to please me -) Anyway when it opened it's first blooms I wasn't for sure if I would like or not. It grew on me thou enough to get some more. I had her planted in an odd spot because the rose in her new bed had not grown back yet. They clearly could not take the raised nature of this bed. Campfire should do well here thou this was late in the season to have moved her.

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stillanntn6b

I agree about the fall growth spurt starting early. I had a few very hard looks at mine yesterday (even through it didn't feel temp wise like fall).

The stipules just shouldn't do that. Nor should a 1/4" stem be able to support two canes of that size....that's asking a lot of the xylem to push nutrients up to those two stems.

Were it mine, I'd assume a worried RRD yes. And I'd be doing whatever it took to isolate or remove the rose because this is the prime population surge time for the vector mites in our part of the world.

It's pretty terrible that I can tell from his description just what his rose looks like....he writes well and hit the high points head on.

Ann

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Patty W. zone 5a Illinois

Based on the stipules I would have removed it also. One thing about rrd is it draws your attention often before there are clear signs. Rrd for some reason has been slow this year to show normal symptoms. We're seeing odd signs first without the hyper thorniness, witches broom and twisted distorted growth. Could it be the excessive rains or a viral mutation. I have not the education to even begin to hazard a guess.

You certainly have the knowledge and expertise. I highly doubt that you're running willy nilly seeing rrd everywhere. You saw something that was off in appearance. By removing the cane you cause no harm and may save the roses life.

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msdorkgirl(11)

Kub, I'm not sure where you're located, but I have learned myself not to mix the fertilizer and whatever chemicals just in case there might be some unforeseen reaction. Also, sometimes too much water causes this in a particular plant. It doesn't look like you have a dry problem?

What I would do to diagnose is to not water, let it get dry (if possible), and then water deeply. Cut the damaged parts and watch what bounces back, moving them to semi-shade as they recover. I would actually retain as much of the green leaves as possible and not do a cut back, but definitely remove the offending leaves so you can monitor the health of the plants.

I had a plant, Distant Drums, completely defoliate on me and I moved him to a place with a little less sun and watered deeply and not often.

Good luck.

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kublakan

SoFL- I've done the dry pot thing with the same result. One of the two Grace De Monacos on Fortuniana that I had suddenly turned yellow because it was in a corner of the yard that wasn't getting enough water. I babied it with deadly results. I also had a Ruby Ice, this one on Dr. Huey, that the same thing happened to and I was able to revive it. This is the draw-back to growing roses in pots.

At first I thought it was an overwatering issue, since my sprinklers go off six days out of the week, but the soil drench of the different roses varied in how much water each had in the pot. As time has passed many of the roses are displaying the browning leaves that are indicative of chemical burn, but some just have dropped all the yellow leaves.

I'm writing it off as an honorary mention of the Dummass & Dummerass award in the area of garden genocide. I haven't lost any roses yet, but time will communicate that clearly.

Okay, MsDorkGirl, you need to share your name/nickname because I'm afraid of insulting you with your screen name, lol. Thanks for the feedback/advice. It had been a long time since I had mixed fertilizer and chemicals in the same sprayer. I did it to try to kill two birds with one stone and try to give the infected roses a boost. I'll make sure to never make that mistake again! I usually baby my sick roses like you say, but I have a yard full of roses in this condition right now. Again, thank you for the advice and thank you for the luck. I'll need it!

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kublakan

This thread is the classic case of two roads diverging. A few points:

1- Everything is an opinion. From first hand knowledge to studies performed by clinical statisticians, nothing is ever concrete. Studies are often funded by corporations with vested interests in selling their products and informal case studies (our experiences) are glimpses at microcosms that are never one-size-fits-all/most. The best perspective is a wide perspective, not a narrow one.

2- Everyone is here to share information in order to better the cause. Sure, I've noted trolls from time to time, but they are rare and far between. No one is out to ruin everyone's roses, so respect their contribution and take it or leave it.

3- No one likes to feel left out or attacked. Let's be civil to one another and understand that our words have impact.

4- Energy is the most contagious commodity we have. Keep it positive and we contribute to a place we can call home and feel safe. Keep it negative and things shut down.

5- I'm no one to play peace keeper here, but as a proud member of this community I thank you for reading my suggestions.

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henry_kuska

A request was made: "the pictures that you linked to are the very close views of roses and we couldn't see how effective grass problems being controlled in your garden. If you can post some recent pictures of your rose garden not your rose closeups that will help a lot."

--------------------------------------------------------------

An opportunity to toot my own horn. Please see:

http://www.helpmefind.com/rose/l.php?l=21.143709

The general description of this rose is at:

http://www.helpmefind.com/rose/l.php?l=2.63226

Of course one can always say that one picture may not be "typical".

The above picture appears in the following group of pictures which also include pictures at various distances (all of the breeding beds pictured are no longer in existence):

https://picasaweb.google.com/110676259758596791462/RosePictures

I assume that the reader understands that controlling weeds is especially important in breeding beds.

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diane_nj 6b/7a(6b/7a)

Karen, I am sure that I did have a dud because most other people in the area are able to exhibit and win with it. Every bloom was split. Much sadness. :-(

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SoFL Rose z10

I get occasional split blooms on mine, but only about 10% of the time. Do I think moonstone is prolific? Yes, its very prolific. One of the best bloomers here, but I do admit she seems to love the heat. If you live in a cooler climate, I'd plant her near a south facing wall so she can get extra heat from the warm cement. She'd love it. I'd have to say Moonstone is probably one of the best roses ever bred. She's strong, vigorous, very prolific, and has the best form next to maybe, Veteran's Honor. She also has large blooms. If she had fragrance she would be absolutely perfect.

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jerijen(Zone 10)

I would do a soils test before applying epsom salts. In most of Southern California, there are PLENTY of mineral salts in the soil and water.

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Gary(USDA ZONE = 9b SUNSET ZONE = 18 (Riverside, CA, USA))

soilhugger541: are you Aaron?

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rosecanadian

I have Grande Dame and Buxom Beauty as first year bare root roses from Palantine.

Both smell wonderful. BB has a better fragrance so far. But GD has BB beat for amount of blooms. Mine don't nod, but YMMV. Last I counted there were 32 buds on my GD. They've just started to open. Sorry, I haven't downloaded my pictures yet (too tired to go that far to get the camera. I'll try tomorrow. Whereas BB has had maybe 4 blooms this year. I think that GD blooms are more beautiful so far. And the sheer amount of flowers on GD is amazing!!

Carol

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kublakan

I find all of these pretty healthy AND on the stingy side with blooms. My vote would still have to go towards GD as she put out some great blooms earlier this year and has good strong canes.

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diane_nj 6b/7a(6b/7a)

ARE, Heirloom and RVR sell own root roses. The ones from HD are (most likely) grafted on Dr. Huey rootstock. The online vendors should have a page where they state if the roses are own root or grafted, and if grafted, the rootstock used.

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Sylvia Weiser Wendel

Thanks, everyone! I was away for a few days in an internet-free area (yes, there still are such places) and couldn't acknowledge all your wise advice.

Rabains, it's my knowledge that is faulty. Not the roses. :)

Roseseek, since you've lived in this area, I really value your input. Doesn't sound as if either multiflora or fortuniana is ideally suited for the climate.

Then again -- Buford -- you're enabling me! Of course I'll buy something from Palatine in the spirit of experimentation.

Zack, your climate and soil sound like total opposites to mine. When I stick something in the (very alkaline) ground, there's always a chance it will just keel over.

Nanadoll, I know what you're saying about Huey. I am constantly grubbing up little volunteers from where I removed maybe six of them last year. It's basically a weed.

Jerijen, I thought we didn't have virus problems here in SoCal? Not saying I don't -- I probably do -- but generally Zone 10 is considered better for that than four-season climates with wet summers, no? Like Ken's ... although winters are probably mild in NE GA, we have virtually rainless summers and the dominant color is beige, not green.

Nick, I don't know anything about Canina, but I have read somewhere that it is a reliable rootstock. Why can't we get it here? Why can't I order from those luscious European nurseries? The answers are shrouded in red tape.

Diane, you cut to the chase. I'm sure the vendors list the rootstock -- I just don't remember/haven't looked (lazy by nature).

Overall, it seems as if the One True Fact still holds -- if you have the right rose for the right spot (one with sun, water and decent soil), things will go well. Otherwise, it's a gamble. But I keep on rolling those dice ...

THANKS!

Sylvia

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