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Spray Cecile Brunner Cecile Brunner (Cl)
Dave & Radhika I do grow the Ever blooming CB the Heiloom sells. Mine is now a 2 year old plant. It is extremely lax. It has never put out stiff panicles like in the pictures and is now about 15 ft high. It seems to bloom continously there always atleast 30-40 blooms on it. There was a nice spring flush that got washed away. I do seem to have seriously underestimated the size of this thing. It is just the second year and I'm having to do some hedge pruning to keep the basal count down. It puts out basals by the dozen!! All my pruning is seriously cutting down the bloom count. Oh! Heirloom says they got theirs from Sisikiyou. It apparently a very undocumented sport of CB. -- Theo in Zone 5 Kansas City "Radika Kesavan" wrote in message ... dave weil wrote: On Thu, 10 Jul 2003 08:57:19 -0700, Radika Kesavan wrote: It is hard to tell from the first picture, but it is very clear in the second. your CB blooms are coming out in long panicles, aren't they. That is a characteristic of the Spray form of CB, not the Climber. Well, they come out in panicles the way that my climbing Old Blush and Fairy throw panicles. I just assume that that's the way that the blooms come off of the cane. The big panicles that I pictured are the only ones that were at the end of the growth, not coming off of the canes, which is why I thought it was odd. And rearranging a bit There is a rather healthy specimen of real Climbing Cecile Brunner at the Heritage Garden in San Jose, it is HUGE and perhaps about 8 years old. This one is very different from the Spray Cecile Brunner in the blossoms blooming like a normal rose, not in those long and lovely panicles. Also, this rose does what climbing CB is famous for: a HUGE explosion of blossoms in the first flush, then throws out blossoms in onesies and twosies and may twentysies for the rest of the growing season. You don't know where there's a picture of this rose, or a similar one, do you? From what I have seen, climbing Cecile Brunner does not throw panicles, it blooms all along the canes, like this: http://www.justourpictures.com/roses...lebrunner.html That is Regina's picture, and it looks very similar to what it looks like at the San Jose Heritage Rose Garden. Here is a picture of Climbing Cecile Brunner in Baldo Villegas's picture collection - you will have to be patient and let all the pictures load and look for the one marked "Climbing Cecile Brunner arch at McKinley Rose Garden in Sacramento, April 12, 2001." http://www.sactorose.org/roses/55climbers.htm You will see in either case no panicles, just the blooms along the canes. In the case of the specimen at the Heritage, it is a huge specimen, sort of like a cross between the first picture and the second, or if you can imagine the second picture to contain a ten times bigger climber (in girth). Oh, here - this is exactly what the one at the San Jose Heritage looks like (minus the house): http://www.rdrop.com/~paul/climbers/cecile.html Paul Barden, who is an excellent Rose Fellow, mentions in that little essay, "Like many of the climbing sports, the most often encountered variety of Climbing Cécile Brünner is once-blooming. However, there is a repeat blooming form which is in commerce. I suggest that if you want this rose, that you search for the repeating form. You may want to try Heirloom Old Garden Roses for it." I got my spray form at a local nursery. Where did you get yours? I have grown a Spray Cecile Brunner for nine years now, and it behaved as though it was almost a non-rebloomer and its first three years, and now, it is apretty consistent remontant rose. And the tell-tale sign is that the blossoms come out in those long and lovely panicles. Does your grow as a climber would? I ask because mine has canes that are between 10 and 15 feet long and certainly climbing wherever I train it (which in this case has been up in the branches of the dead tree. Mine grows as a self-supporting giant fountain, with 15 to 20 feet canes all coming out in a fountain, IYKWIM. Sort of like a Cecile Brunner bush that has sported to a giant creature throwing panicles, which I believe is the origin of the Spray form. I have heard that the climbing Cecile Brunner was a sport of the bush form, and in an independent sporting event, the Spray form came about, and that all three can go from one to the other. I do not know if that is really so, but in general, sporting is a display of somatic cell instability and mutation, so is it possible that what you have is a climber that is sporting into the Spray form? Is it possible that yours is the repeat-blooming climbing Cecile Brunner that Paul Barden mentions in his essay that is also sporting in parts to the Spray form? Incidentally, to add to all this confusion, there are some who claim that there is another rose called Bloomfield Abundance that is being also sold as the Spray Cecile Brunner - here, take a look at this: http://www.ph-rose-gardens.com/00931.htm My Spray Cecile Brunner does not have that wild-looking "longer sepals that may extend like flags above the buds," but I have seen it on some gorgeous CB specimens around here. I do not know the truth of this either. What is normal for CB? I've seen pics of the bush form and it seems the same to me... Eh? Do you mean what is normal for size of CB? The bush form, a neighbour has a couple of specimens, is a 6 feet tall cylinder that is about 3 feet wide. It is in bloom ALL the time. I mean, there are no flushes, it is in bloom ALL the time. Oh, here is a picture from Regina's web site, taken in Sacramento: http://www.justourpictures.com/roses/lepactole_CB.html Whereas the Spray Cecile Brunner gives a minimum of four distinct and large flushes in our garden, though the first one is the largest and the subsequent ones slighlty smaller. As I said, mine has basically been in bloom the whole season. Right now, it seems to be resting a little, but I still have new blooms and more on the way... Hmmmm .... kinda confusing, isn't it? You can shape the Spray Cecile Brunner anyway you like, as long as you leave it a large bush. ... Mine definitely hasn't grown in a bush form. The second year, it threw a HUGE fat basal that's ended up being about 15 feet long, with lots of canes growing off of it. This cane is almost 2 inches wide and is responsible for all of the growth that you see up in the branches. Hmmm ... see, I grow ALL my climbing roses except Renae that has very lax canes as tall, self-supporting bushes. I do not like to train them in any way, and my Spray CB never needed to be trained on any support, not really, not after the third year, and since I have it planted next to a redwood wall-fence, I just tied it to a few hooks driven into the wall in the first couple of years. Now the canes are so thick that no training is needed. It is quite tall - like I said, 15 to 20 feet tall canes exist, but generally I try to keep the limbs somewhere between 10 and 15 feet tall - for various reasons. Entertaining report which I enjoyed and your observations coincide with mine. Has your spray CB ever exhibited any climbing traits such as the ones that I've described? Some - meaning tall growth; as for as training goes, I have never tried to train it beyond what I said above. Here are two more pics, one of the general growth and one of the new growth on the lower panicle. In the first, it's hard to see, but there are several sprays and a lot of buds. In the second, to the right, you can see the 2 inch wide basal that is the source of all of the growth in the tip part of the tree... http://mywpages.comcast.net/ddweil2/CB3.jpg http://mywpages.comcast.net/ddweil2/CB4.jpg Nice shots, especially the first one. I am beginning to lean towards your having the remontant climbing CB that is in commerce according to Paul Braden as mentioned in http://www.rdrop.com/~paul/climbers/cecile.html I have never seen this form of the climber, and I do not know if it throws out panicles as you see on your climbing CB. How about contacting Heirloom Old Garden Roses and asking them some questions about the blooming habits of their remontant CB? May be it does bloom in panicles, and combines all the good features of the climber (size of plant), the spray (beautiful presentation of the flowers) and the bush (constant blooming habit)? Sounds miraculous, but you may have got very lucky if this is teh kind of CB you have! -- Radika California USDA 9 / Sunset 15 |
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