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Antique roses at...WalMart?
"theoneflasehaddock" wrote in message om... (Hamp) wrote in message . com... "Mark. Gooley" wrote in message ... Yep. Old Blush, St. David's, Blush Noisette, Mutabilis, and a few others, apparently on their own roots, for about $7 each at a WalMart StuporCenter in north Florida, fairly good size in 2-ish gallon pots. First they sell some own-root bare-root bushes, roots packed in wood waste in those nasty little plastic-wrapped cylinders, earlier in the year, and now this. Yeah, I bought a couple that I don't already have. Mixed emotions he it's good to see fine old varieties offered in the mass market, and apparently on their own roots, but this might do the small rose nurseries more harm than good: people will expect bigger plants for less money. Compared with the small but vigorous bushes I have gotten by mail-order from e.g. The Uncommon Rose and Chamblee's, these are giants (if a bit bedraggled from shipping and WalMart handling) -- and that's the problem. Mark., should have spotted the trend coming Obviously Mike doesn't work at Walmart. Wonder which Rose Nursery he's affliatedwith that's getting hurt by the super centers. I try not to be prejudiced against or for any seller. I want a decent product at a fair price. Often I get this from online sources such as Chamblees or Antique Rose Imporium and local Nurserys but I'm not opposed to purchasing anything from any source if I want. As to Walmart's return policy, it's far better than any nursery or online retailer I've dealt with. They will give a replacement or refund with no questions. Hamp Oh, sure, criticizing Walmart in favor of other nurseries means he works for a plant nursery. Not all who dislike Walmart are paid to dislike it. Personally, I've gotten plants there that have died almost immediately when put in sun, becuase they had adjusted to so much shade. Thier conditions aren't good, and thier plants may well die if not adjusted right. Sweet troll o' mine......If you cut the runners off of *new* roses, such as tea roses, and plant them elsewhere, they return to their old-rose state. Am I mistaken? I've done this quite a bit and get wild looking roses, a different color from the original and they're climbing, not tea roses. Even if they don't revert back to old roses, it's a beautiful vine. One of my Tropicans was replanted on the other side of my yard, just runners, and it took off like the wild roses do. It's a deep red instead of orange like the Tropicana, and has only one row of petals on each rose. I've never quite understood this.....It's prolific though! Covers my back corner fence in abundance. Much thornier than a tea rose also. I do know that it's probably one of the roses that the Tropicana was bred from, but curious to know if it's indeed a *wild rose*, or an *old rose*. kate ps- Sure would like to see a pic of your yard sometime. - theoneflasehaddock |
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