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Hunter Rugossa w/ blackspot help please
I live in Central Mi. zone 5. I have a third year Hunter Rugossa that has a
good ammount of blackspot. I know you are not supposed to spray Rugossas, but this variety seems to not look much like most Rugossas. This rose is about 5 ft. tall, with huge 1 in. diameter canes. It is sending out more new canes, 1 of which is about 7 ft. tall. The flush of blooms it put out in June was amazing. I mean it was loaded. Has anyone ever tried to spray this rose for blackspot ? I would hate to try it, and loose it. The only reason for my inquiry is that I heard this rose is a complex hybrid with many other rose types in it's make up. Thanks in advance Tony |
#2
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Hunter Rugossa w/ blackspot help please
"S.La Rocca" wrote in message . .. I live in Central Mi. zone 5. I have a third year Hunter Rugossa that has a good ammount of blackspot. I know you are not supposed to spray Rugossas, but this variety seems to not look much like most Rugossas. This rose is about 5 ft. tall, with huge 1 in. diameter canes. It is sending out more new canes, 1 of which is about 7 ft. tall. The flush of blooms it put out in June was amazing. I mean it was loaded. Has anyone ever tried to spray this rose for blackspot ? I would hate to try it, and loose it. The only reason for my inquiry is that I heard this rose is a complex hybrid with many other rose types in it's make up. Thanks in advance Tony Hi Tony, the general consensus is not to spray. There is a valid reason for it since the rugate (wrinkled) character of their leaves can bring a host of problems to the plant, inability to process photosynthesis, "breathing" the necessary oxygen to produce the means to carry the auxin all the way to the flowering ends, and because any kind of spray that will have to stay on the surface of the leaf will end accumulating in the rugae the plant will show you how unhappy she really is by burning every leaf into a crisp brown paper sample to drop it as soon as she is through teaching you ;) There is a school of thought which I do not follow however, that suggests that you could only spray the lower part of the plant and see what happens. I can tell you what I think it happens: all the foliage will drop, the plant will be stressed and eventually the new foliage will grow. Something you can accomplish without going the spraying route. If you can take all the diseased foliage from the plant by hand - grant you defoliating by hand 7 feet canes is not a trivial matter - and clean all the area around the base of your plant, mulch with some newspapers and then cover the newspapers with some natural mulch, you may avoid at least for the summer further contamination by the fungus. I don't grow Hunter now, but I remember that ever since it came out people have spoken about its habit of getting black spot. It was a magnet here, and eventually in spite of the gorgeous red and the sweet fragrance, found its way out of the garden all on its own. I hope yours doesn't do that. Allegra |
#3
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Hunter Rugossa w/ blackspot help please
"Allegra" wrote in message news:3eGPa.37407$N7.4525@sccrnsc03... [major snippage here because I have no clue about Rugosas or what Allegra is talking about, sigh] Something you can accomplish without going the spraying route. If you can take all the diseased foliage from the plant by hand - grant you defoliating by hand 7 feet canes is not a trivial matter - and clean all the area around the base of your plant, mulch with some newspapers and then cover the newspapers with some natural mulch, you may avoid at least for the summer further contamination by the fungus. Yes!!! I really felt like an idiot while trying to explain to my hubby that I had a use for all the newspapers that were stacking up. (And, believe me, if you get the Wall Street Journal plus local paper, you're talking about a *serious* amount of newsprint every week!) The weeds in my "rose bed" (hah!) had gotten out of control this spring -- actually, I misspoke. I put down Preen Plus last fall; the roses seemed to like it, and most weeds were killed off, but the 5% that were not killed off apparently love Preen --, so I took the easy way out -- I watered the roses thoroughly, then put down newspapers around the roses, watered the newspapers, then shoveled shredded-hardwood bark mulch on top of that. I don't know that I'd call this whole thing "pretty" exactly, but I can say it's pretty much weed free! (And pulling out a weed or two once a week beats the heck out of what I had to deal with before!) PS to my local "homeys" -- you know who you are! -- if you want some newspaper or hardwood mulch (6 cubic yards can go a loooong way), give me a call! Anne Lurie Raleigh, NC |
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