View Single Post
  #22   Report Post  
Old 09-06-2003, 03:20 PM
Theo Asir
 
Posts: n/a
Default black roses question




http://www.aoc.nrao.edu/~mstephen/ladyb03.jpg
Finally. It looks healthy and is evergreen, I swear. The apple trees

nearby
took 10 years to hit their stride, perhaps this is the apple in Lady

Banks.

That a nice crop of.. ..Grass! :-

I once went looking for R. stellata mirifica near my aunt's house in High
Rolls, NM, and in 10 minutes found R. arkansana, it was a Thanksgiving and

I
really didn't think I had a prayer of finding any roses going down Fresnal
Creek, much less mirifica. (Arkansana is trying to take over the

plantation
now.) If anyone interested does a websearch on Fresnal Creek, they will
instantly find--and to my GREAT astonishment just the other day, ThankYou,
Alice for the snail--that Fresnal Creek is preCISEly where you find

mirifica
growing wild. This is less than 5 minutes by highway from where I found
arkansana.
Mirifica, meaning 'wonderful', joins the Gincko, Dawn Redwood, and cycads

in
that rare group of plants called 'living fossils'. They evolved on
island-like mountains in a sea of desert when the lush Oligocene lowlands

dried
up and became deserts. They look like cosmos and are the showiest flowers

of
any American wild rose. Smell like hyacinth. Leaves like columbine.

July
4 is just around the corner, and I'm all jazzed about the thrill of the

hunt.
I was once sent a small root of Mirifica--as well as R. minutifolia, which
has the tiniest leaves of any rose--but this was like October/November and
sadly neither survived.
But I'll be finding Mirifica soon, its seeds are as good as in my pocket.
wink

So yes, I agree-- the world of roses extends WAY beyond those big fat

hybrids
which we are all too prone to be satisfied with. As with all things, when
you expand you horizons, that's a good thing, Martha.


I agree. Don't know if any roses can really
be called living fossils considering the oldest
record only puts them 25-30 million years back.

But in the sense that nobody thought it was there
but it is, sure!

Sure is amazing what you find growing even
in a city suburb. I have spotted the following
growing in various spots in KC. R. Arkansana,
R. Nutkana, R. Setigera, R. Laevigata and
my find of finds R. Ptercantha no less growing
in a church side lot incredibly, doing amazingly
well too. Tried to trace the person who grew it
but the church was closed. Make note to try again.

--
Theo in Zone 5
Kansas City