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jammer 05-05-2003 12:44 PM

Cross pollination?
 
Hi again..

I have 3 different kinds of rose bushes. Sorry, Oklahoma is the only
name i remember. I thought one was a Tropicana? Anyway, they started
out peach, dull pink, and red. Now they are about 6 shades. Thank
Goodness the bush retains it's original scent as they are all
different. And the color change doesn't annoy me, especially since i
have a brilliant deep pink one for the first time this week, but i am
just curious, is this the work of the bees and butterflies?

R & L Porter 06-05-2003 02:21 AM

Cross pollination?
 

"jammer" j@mmer wrote in message
...
Hi again..

I have 3 different kinds of rose bushes. Sorry, Oklahoma is the only
name i remember. I thought one was a Tropicana? Anyway, they started
out peach, dull pink, and red. Now they are about 6 shades. Thank
Goodness the bush retains it's original scent as they are all
different. And the color change doesn't annoy me, especially since i
have a brilliant deep pink one for the first time this week, but i am
just curious, is this the work of the bees and butterflies?


Hi,
I'm not sure that I completely understand your question. Are you saying
that all 3 rose bushes are each displaying 6 different shades, or one in
particular? There are roses that change colour, so to speak, as the bloom
ages. Some start off purple and fade to gray, some start off pristine white
and age to blush before the petals fall, and every variation in between!
Some
roses are multi-coloured to begin with, and show several different colours
on
one bloom all at the same time. And rose colouration will also vary with
the
soil, the heat, the cold, the amount of sun, etc.. A rose that is hot pink
in
my garden might be closer to blush in a much hotter climate. You get the
idea.

Laura



jammer 06-05-2003 02:21 AM

Cross pollination?
 
On Mon, 05 May 2003 17:21:10 GMT, "R & L Porter"
wrote:

I'm not sure that I completely understand your question


I planted a dull pink flowering bush, a red one, and a peach one.
After several years, the colors are all mixed up on the bushes. The
pink one has red and pink flowers, the pink one has red and pink, etc


R & L Porter 06-05-2003 04:32 PM

Cross pollination?
 

"jammer" j@mmer wrote in message
...
On Mon, 05 May 2003 17:21:10 GMT, "R & L Porter"
wrote:

I'm not sure that I completely understand your question


I planted a dull pink flowering bush, a red one, and a peach one.
After several years, the colors are all mixed up on the bushes. The
pink one has red and pink flowers, the pink one has red and pink, etc

Aaah, now I see. Not my area of expertise, cross-pollination, etc. so
I will bow out. I do know that some roses will revert back, eg.
a sport like Rosa Mundi (striped rose) may revert back to
the origianl plant (R. gallica officinalis) and vice versa. Sorry
to not be of much help. Maybe someone wiser will chime in. Or
you could visit www.ars.org -- the American rose society web
page.

Laura



FOW 07-05-2003 07:32 AM

Cross pollination?
 
Some roses will revert back to one of the original strains. But all 3 of
your roses, at the same time? 1, maybe but not all of them. My roses are a
LITTLE different color every year. The rain will do weird things to rose
colors, spots and green colors .

"R & L Porter" wrote in message
...

"jammer" j@mmer wrote in message
...
On Mon, 05 May 2003 17:21:10 GMT, "R & L Porter"
wrote:

I'm not sure that I completely understand your question


I planted a dull pink flowering bush, a red one, and a peach one.
After several years, the colors are all mixed up on the bushes. The
pink one has red and pink flowers, the pink one has red and pink, etc

Aaah, now I see. Not my area of expertise, cross-pollination, etc. so
I will bow out. I do know that some roses will revert back, eg.
a sport like Rosa Mundi (striped rose) may revert back to
the origianl plant (R. gallica officinalis) and vice versa. Sorry
to not be of much help. Maybe someone wiser will chime in. Or
you could visit www.ars.org -- the American rose society web
page.

Laura





Jerome Morrow 07-05-2003 01:08 PM

Cross pollination?
 
Same thing happened to one of my iceburg roses. Its next to several red
roses including a Mr Lincoln and now it has red spots all over the flowers.

I think that its partly due to the weak nature of the particular plant.
Another iceburg in the same bed, which is stronger, is not affected.



Theo Asir 07-05-2003 04:20 PM

Cross pollination?
 
You have botyritis.
Time to spray.

--
Theo in Zone 5
Kansas City

"Jerome Morrow" wrote in message
...
Same thing happened to one of my iceburg roses. Its next to several red
roses including a Mr Lincoln and now it has red spots all over the

flowers.

I think that its partly due to the weak nature of the particular plant.
Another iceburg in the same bed, which is stronger, is not affected.





Cass 07-05-2003 04:44 PM

Cross pollination?
 
In article , Jerome
Morrow wrote:

Same thing happened to one of my iceburg roses. Its next to several red
roses including a Mr Lincoln and now it has red spots all over the flowers.


No cross pollinization there. Like Theo said, that is a fungus, and a
bad one. Remove all blooms showing those spots and throw them in the
trash. Clean up all petals on the ground. Botrytis is very bad this
year, theories ranging from resistant strains to weather conditions
offered as explanation.

http://members.tripod.com/sactorose/ipm/83botrytis.html

J. Del Col 07-05-2003 07:32 PM

Cross pollination?
 
jammer j@mmer wrote in message . ..
Hi again..

I have 3 different kinds of rose bushes. Sorry, Oklahoma is the only
name i remember. I thought one was a Tropicana? Anyway, they started
out peach, dull pink, and red. Now they are about 6 shades. Thank
Goodness the bush retains it's original scent as they are all
different. And the color change doesn't annoy me, especially since i
have a brilliant deep pink one for the first time this week, but i am
just curious, is this the work of the bees and butterflies?



Cross pollination has nothing to do with it. It would only affect the
color of the plants grown from the seeds of the pollinated flower, not
the flower itself.

Some roses will produce "sports"i.e. different colored flowers on the
same
bush; these are either reversions or mutations caused by the unstable
genetic makeup of complex hybrids. They are not the result of cross
pollination.

As others have pointed out, growing conditions can also affect flower
color.

J. Del Col

jammer 07-05-2003 11:08 PM

Cross pollination?
 
On 7 May 2003 11:32:57 -0700, (J. Del Col) wrote:


Cross pollination has nothing to do with it. It would only affect the
color of the plants grown from the seeds of the pollinated flower, not
the flower itself.

Some roses will produce "sports"i.e. different colored flowers on the
same
bush; these are either reversions or mutations caused by the unstable
genetic makeup of complex hybrids. They are not the result of cross
pollination.

As others have pointed out, growing conditions can also affect flower
color.

J. Del Col


Hmm...interesting. Thanks.


Jerome Morrow 08-05-2003 02:56 PM

Cross pollination?
 
Oh no!!!! I saw the pictures and I do have a fungus!! Whats the best spray
to use?




FOW 08-05-2003 08:20 PM

Cross pollination?
 
I have 30 roses in a bed 10 ft x 20 ft . Most are 3-4 ft apart. They were .
NOW they all touch each other, I sometimes look at them and all I see is one
BIG rose . I over fertilized this year.
I have never in 7 years of growing them seen cross pollination.
Most of them are Hybrid Teas, the rest Floribundas, 2 are grandys.
I guess I have all strong strains.
"Jerome Morrow" wrote in message
...
Same thing happened to one of my iceburg roses. Its next to several red
roses including a Mr Lincoln and now it has red spots all over the

flowers.

I think that its partly due to the weak nature of the particular plant.
Another iceburg in the same bed, which is stronger, is not affected.





FOW 08-05-2003 08:20 PM

Cross pollination?
 
I have seen rain cause colored spots on my roses. No fungus here.
Just bugs.
"Theo Asir" wrote in message
news:2ea0301f3c8b253409f77fc53733a427@TeraNews...
You have botyritis.
Time to spray.

--
Theo in Zone 5
Kansas City

"Jerome Morrow" wrote in message
...
Same thing happened to one of my iceburg roses. Its next to several red
roses including a Mr Lincoln and now it has red spots all over the

flowers.

I think that its partly due to the weak nature of the particular plant.
Another iceburg in the same bed, which is stronger, is not affected.







Theo Asir 08-05-2003 09:32 PM

Cross pollination?
 
Sorry I don't understand.
Water by itself does not
cause any damage.

It promotes growth of Fungii.
The fungii cause discoloration.

Check out Cass's link.

--
Theo in Zone 5
Kansas City

"FOW" wrote in message
...
I have seen rain cause colored spots on my roses. No fungus here.
Just bugs.
"Theo Asir" wrote in message
news:2ea0301f3c8b253409f77fc53733a427@TeraNews...
You have botyritis.
Time to spray.

--
Theo in Zone 5
Kansas City

"Jerome Morrow" wrote in message
...
Same thing happened to one of my iceburg roses. Its next to several

red
roses including a Mr Lincoln and now it has red spots all over the

flowers.

I think that its partly due to the weak nature of the particular

plant.
Another iceburg in the same bed, which is stronger, is not affected.









FOW 09-05-2003 07:44 PM

Cross pollination?
 
If you see my roses, they have NO botrytis.Or powdery mildew or downy
mildew. Some of them are getting spotted from rain. Seen it happen for 7
years to them. Some just rot on the stem, Brides Maid especially. Not
enough heat to make all my roses pop.
Seems like some of my roses have a very high petal count, Very dense buds,
They just don't open until the 2nd or 3rd bloom cycle.
"Theo Asir" wrote in message
news:554934a922cc5ef71daa816c266d5cf4@TeraNews...
Sorry I don't understand.
Water by itself does not
cause any damage.

It promotes growth of Fungii.
The fungii cause discoloration.

Check out Cass's link.

--
Theo in Zone 5
Kansas City

"FOW" wrote in message
...
I have seen rain cause colored spots on my roses. No fungus here.
Just bugs.
"Theo Asir" wrote in message
news:2ea0301f3c8b253409f77fc53733a427@TeraNews...
You have botyritis.
Time to spray.

--
Theo in Zone 5
Kansas City

"Jerome Morrow" wrote in

message
...
Same thing happened to one of my iceburg roses. Its next to several

red
roses including a Mr Lincoln and now it has red spots all over the
flowers.

I think that its partly due to the weak nature of the particular

plant.
Another iceburg in the same bed, which is stronger, is not affected.











Theo Asir 09-05-2003 07:44 PM

Cross pollination?
 
You have very precisely
detailed the symptoms of Botyritis.
Rotting on the stem is typical.

It usually goes away once dry
hot summer weather approaches.

If you're comfortable w/ that thats OK too.

--
Theo in Zone 5
Kansas City

"FOW" wrote in message
...
If you see my roses, they have NO botrytis.Or powdery mildew or downy
mildew. Some of them are getting spotted from rain. Seen it happen for 7
years to them. Some just rot on the stem, Brides Maid especially. Not
enough heat to make all my roses pop.
Seems like some of my roses have a very high petal count, Very dense buds,
They just don't open until the 2nd or 3rd bloom cycle.
"Theo Asir" wrote in message
news:554934a922cc5ef71daa816c266d5cf4@TeraNews...
Sorry I don't understand.
Water by itself does not
cause any damage.

It promotes growth of Fungii.
The fungii cause discoloration.

Check out Cass's link.

--
Theo in Zone 5
Kansas City

"FOW" wrote in message
...
I have seen rain cause colored spots on my roses. No fungus here.
Just bugs.
"Theo Asir" wrote in message
news:2ea0301f3c8b253409f77fc53733a427@TeraNews...
You have botyritis.
Time to spray.

--
Theo in Zone 5
Kansas City

"Jerome Morrow" wrote in

message
...
Same thing happened to one of my iceburg roses. Its next to

several
red
roses including a Mr Lincoln and now it has red spots all over the
flowers.

I think that its partly due to the weak nature of the particular

plant.
Another iceburg in the same bed, which is stronger, is not

affected.













lms 10-05-2003 01:32 PM

Cross pollination?
 
In article ,
says...

Oh no!!!! I saw the pictures and I do have a fungus!! Whats the best spray
to use?


The best spray to use is Spray Van Lines. Wo Gest! but stop a few hundred
miles before you get to that coast.

m

for you this might mean some ocean voyages but you won't regret it, at least
you'll be out of the Swamps.


FOW 17-05-2003 09:44 AM

Cross pollination?
 
Your right, I do have Botrytis. I just never thought of it as that until I
read all the things posted here. I just dead headed the rotting flowers and
now we have some heat here, and am in the 2nd bloom cycle now
.....................No more problems. I live in Wine grape growing country.
Heard of grapes getting THE NOBLE ROT.........botrytis. Never thought of it
happening with roses.

I guess if I keep an open mind, I learn something.............Duh !
Thanks for the info !
"Theo Asir" wrote in message
news:a11eeed1bcefe7f38ceea7a71e465606@TeraNews...
You have very precisely
detailed the symptoms of Botyritis.
Rotting on the stem is typical.

It usually goes away once dry
hot summer weather approaches.

If you're comfortable w/ that thats OK too.

--
Theo in Zone 5
Kansas City

"FOW" wrote in message
...
If you see my roses, they have NO botrytis.Or powdery mildew or downy
mildew. Some of them are getting spotted from rain. Seen it happen for 7
years to them. Some just rot on the stem, Brides Maid especially. Not
enough heat to make all my roses pop.
Seems like some of my roses have a very high petal count, Very dense

buds,
They just don't open until the 2nd or 3rd bloom cycle.
"Theo Asir" wrote in message
news:554934a922cc5ef71daa816c266d5cf4@TeraNews...
Sorry I don't understand.
Water by itself does not
cause any damage.

It promotes growth of Fungii.
The fungii cause discoloration.

Check out Cass's link.

--
Theo in Zone 5
Kansas City

"FOW" wrote in message
...
I have seen rain cause colored spots on my roses. No fungus here.
Just bugs.
"Theo Asir" wrote in message
news:2ea0301f3c8b253409f77fc53733a427@TeraNews...
You have botyritis.
Time to spray.

--
Theo in Zone 5
Kansas City

"Jerome Morrow" wrote in

message
...
Same thing happened to one of my iceburg roses. Its next to

several
red
roses including a Mr Lincoln and now it has red spots all over

the
flowers.

I think that its partly due to the weak nature of the particular
plant.
Another iceburg in the same bed, which is stronger, is not

affected.
















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