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William Barger 08-01-2006 08:36 PM

Landscape roses
 
What are the best roses to choose considering the following information?
Zone 9B, full sun, in a raised bed situation. I want a fragrant, dark
red rose that can handle Florida's hot, humid conditions. This bed has 2
birdfeeders and a birdbath. It will be planted with a white rose,
several annuals such as "Blue Daze", red and white zinnias, all ringed
with different height and color sunflowers. I only need the two red
roses to complete the plant list. Mr Lincoln seemed to fit the bill, but
I am having no luck locating them. My local nurseries do not have what I
want.
Any suggestions and/or advice would be greatly appreciated.
Bill











Tim Tompkins 08-01-2006 10:17 PM

Landscape roses
 

"William Barger" wrote in message
...
What are the best roses to choose considering the following information?
Zone 9B, full sun, in a raised bed situation. I want a fragrant, dark
red rose that can handle Florida's hot, humid conditions. This bed has 2
birdfeeders and a birdbath. It will be planted with a white rose,
several annuals such as "Blue Daze", red and white zinnias, all ringed
with different height and color sunflowers. I only need the two red
roses to complete the plant list. Mr Lincoln seemed to fit the bill, but
I am having no luck locating them. My local nurseries do not have what I
want.
Any suggestions and/or advice would be greatly appreciated.
Bill


Mister Lincoln is an excellent red with fragrance, however it is prone to
mildew.

Don't hesitate to order from a reputable source on the web, you can look at
www.helpmefind.com/roses to find suppliers. Try to stay with someone who
uses fortuniana root stock if they sell grafted plants. Fortunia does
better in the eastern soils than Dr. Huey.

Since Mister Lincoln is no longer a patented variety it should be readily
available from many sources.

A quick look at helpmefind turned up:

http://www.rosesunlimitedownroot.com/ in SC and

http://www.nelsonsfloridiaroses.com in FL.

Tim



William Barger 10-01-2006 03:32 PM

Landscape roses
 
Thanks Tim for the great information. I am a novice rose grower, and
kinda worried about mail order roses. My concern is planting bare root
roses. The ones I have were purchased in 5 gallon containers with
foliage. Thanks again.
Bill











Anne Lurie 10-01-2006 11:46 PM

Landscape roses
 
Bill,

I am much more experienced with birdfeeders & birdbaths than roses -- so
far, at least! -- but you might be consider a birdbath "dripper" where the
water then drains into your rosebed.

I suggest the dripper simply because the number of birds at that type of
birdbath have outnumbered all the other types about 100 to 1!

Let us know how it works out.

Anne



"William Barger" wrote in message
...
What are the best roses to choose considering the following information?
Zone 9B, full sun, in a raised bed situation. I want a fragrant, dark
red rose that can handle Florida's hot, humid conditions. This bed has 2
birdfeeders and a birdbath. It will be planted with a white rose,
several annuals such as "Blue Daze", red and white zinnias, all ringed
with different height and color sunflowers. I only need the two red
roses to complete the plant list. Mr Lincoln seemed to fit the bill, but
I am having no luck locating them. My local nurseries do not have what I
want.
Any suggestions and/or advice would be greatly appreciated.
Bill













dave weil 11-01-2006 02:21 PM

Landscape roses
 
On Tue, 10 Jan 2006 10:32:18 -0500, (William
Barger) wrote:

Thanks Tim for the great information. I am a novice rose grower, and
kinda worried about mail order roses. My concern is planting bare root
roses. The ones I have were purchased in 5 gallon containers with
foliage. Thanks again.
Bill


You shouldn't have any problems with bare root as long as you:

Soak the roots for a day before you plant.

Dig a big enough hole and put a mound of soil in the middle of the
hole to drape the roots over. IF the bottom of the hole hits clay,
then dig at least 6 inches deeper (preferably a foot) and put a layer
of topsoil and compost in. This is the same as if you planted a rooted
plant.

Sprinkle a little bone meal and compost in the bottom. NO FERTILIZER!

Make sure that the hole is dug so that the bud union is roughly flush
with the ground when it's placed on the mound. If you prefer to bury
your bud union, then dig it THAT deep. If you prefer the union to be
above ground, then adjust the mound accordingly.

Fill with dirt. Water well, let it settle and fill with more dirt and
repeat the watering. Make sure that the soil is well compacted. This
is the same as when you plant any rooted plant.

Mound up mulch until the canes are completely covered. Keep the mound
uniformly damp in the coming weeks. With normal early spring rains,
this usually only means watering maybe once or twice for the month. If
it's drier than normal, then water once or twice a week.

In about a month, you'll see new growth coming through the mulch. At
that point, CAREFULLY pull the mulch back from the rose over the next
couple of days (I like to do it in stages, but you can do it all at
once if you like). When you get close to the canes, you can use a very
light stream of water to wash away the remaining mulch, but be careful
about the water pressure. If you DO break a bit of new growth, don't
freak out. Also, don't be surprised if the new growth looks pale and
albinoesque. That's normal. It hasn't seen the sun yet. In those first
couple of days, the new growth will be a bit fragile so try to avoid
futzing around the canes and don't hit them with strong streams of
water. But after a couple of days of sun, they'll start to toughen and
green up.

At this point, you now have a very vigorously growing bush that's
already been mulched. At this point, simply do the normal
fertilization routine, but remember to fertilize BELOW the mulch at
ground level. Now's the time for more bone meal and blood meal, epson
salts and fish emulsion (if desired). The epson salts is the one thing
that I wouldn't forgo though. It is supposed to encourage basal
breaks.

The one advantage to bare root roses is that they have a better
"foundation" in terms of canes (often times thicker and more robust).
If you can overcome the fear of procedure, I think you'll find that
some of your best roses over time will be bare root. And once you get
the knack of the planting procedure, you'll wonder why you ever
worried about it.

Oh yeah, the perfect time to plant is a couple of weeks before the
last frost date in your locale. The mulch will protect the plant from
last minute frosts and you'll uncover the plant before the sun really
gets strong and the new growth won't be as shocked when it finally
sees the sun. However, you can certainly plant well into the season if
you'd like. I'd say Memorial Day + one week is about as late as you'd
like to plant bare roots because of the strength of the sun at that
point.


William Barger 20-01-2006 04:10 AM

Landscape roses
 
Thanks Anne and Dave. I printed out your post Dave. So much good stuff
in it I will need to review it from time to time. Thanks again.
Bill












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