While these storms can also bring trouble, and the time-lapse here might make many uneasy, they only bring me calm and a sense of wonder at the power behind it all, the power building at my very doorstep and passing me by, God and the Grim Reaper together at once, mysterious and yet always nearby.
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Sunday, May 22, 2022
Storm Smiles
Sunday, November 7, 2021
Keeps on Ticking...
'Champlain' |
And I can't, I can't be mad this morning about the time change. So much disruption of our diurnal rhythms and so much anger over political power wielded autocratically and irrationally just isn't worth the fight today when I'm staring at the happy face of 'Champlain'. Oh don't get me wrong, I woke up at 4:00 a.m. instead of 5:00 a.m. because my soul didn't get the memo about changing rhythms, and I waited the same amount of time for the sun to rise after waking. I just know now that I'll be driving in again with the rising sun in my eyes, endangering every walking or biking schoolchild for another month, and that I'll now be driving home in darkness every evening instead of having another hour of light to enjoy.
'Polareis' |
Okay, yes, I'm mad as usual about the time change. I'm mad that my chances for a heart attack are greatly increased this week and that automobile accidents will increase due to bureaucratic political whimsy. As I've said before, a pox on the houses of every politician, Democrat or Republican, who doesn't repeal this nonsense and leave us on daylight savings time all year long. As I vowed last spring, I'm staying on Daylight Savings. If you want ProfessorRoush, you'll find him with his watch and computers set to EST, my new solution to the biennial B.S. imposed on us by our elected nonrepresentatives. Stores and schedules will now just have to confirm to my time, ProfessorRoush Standard Time.
Saturday, May 22, 2021
Just Bloomin'
My original 'Polareis', shown here in front of pink and taller 'Lillian Gibson', is a little more beat up this year, but she's trying to maintain her 5 foot mature height. Dwarfed and outclassed a little by the hardier and healthier 'Lillian Gibson', I still think she'll come back with a vengeance with a little loving care this summer. She's been blooming just a few more days than her younger offspring, and you can see the fallen petals littering the ground at her feet.
Coming in from the east area of the garden, I'm well pleased by bright pink 'Foxi Pavement' and gray-white 'Snow Pavement', both just beginning to bloom here in the foreground, although I haven't got around to pruning the winter-damaged cane of 'Applejack' that spoils the picture hanging out over 'Snow Pavement'. 'Foxi Pavement' and 'Snow Pavement' are both unkept and loosely petaled, but they both attract bees like...well, like flies to honey.
Just behind them as I walk further towards the gazebo, the same roses from the opposite view of the first photo above, 'Survivor' and 'Hanza' fill the middle depth, with light pink 'Fru Dagmar Hastrup' just peeking in on the right. My gazebo, in the far background, lends a little structure to the photo and view. It's a little weather worn, but has stood through the worst of our storms, although I made a mental note today to replace the weakened wooden swing inside before it collapses under an unsuspecting Mrs. ProfessorRoush. I've seldom seen 'Pink Grootendorst' look better than she does this year. She's a gangly, rough, farm-raised kind of gal, rarely dressed up for the ball, but she's a pretty lass even so. I wouldn't ever bring her into the house in a vase, but in my garden, as a solid survivor of Rose Rosette disease, 'Pink Grootendorst' has earned her place.Saturday, March 5, 2016
Oh No! I'm Not Ready!
I'm not ready to round the corner and see this Magnolia stellata already showing white petals. It's still partially sheathed, shy to display full wantonness to the warm gaze of spring, but I can already smell the warm musky scent of the Cretaceous seeping forth, sensual siren to my senses. Another warm day and I'll see the yellow stamens and glistening pistils, the first mating of spring in full view. Pray with me that no hasty frost browns these creamy petals.
I'm not ready to see my "Pink Forsythia" (Abeliophyllum distichum 'Roseum') already in full bloom and display. This bush has been a minor part of my garden since 2004, long enough that my memory had made her into the natural "white forsythia" instead of the pink form. Ah, the fickle memory of age! It is moderately scented, but in odd fashion that I would liken to a sweet acetone with overtones of sweaty feet. I'm not ready nor desperate enough yet to present this questionable bouquet to Mrs. ProfessorRoush's more discerning nose.
Abeliophyllum distichium 'Roseum' |
I'm certainly not ready to see roses leafing out, including this particularly thorny specimen of 'Polareis' which seems to be betting that the frosts are over. Rugosas are tough plants, but I still wish they would be a little slower to stick their stems and leaves out into open air. Almost all the roses are showing green, willing victims to the guillotine of a late frost that will surely yet come. Patience, my children, patience is a virtue, and haste tempts a thorny termination.
I'm not ready, and neither is my garden. Go back to sleep, child, and wait for a warmer morning.
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
Polareis Present
And survive it did, to bloom for the first time on July 7th. The plant is still only a foot tall, but putting out buds by the dozens, so it promises lots of blooms to come. The foliage of 'Polareis', as you can see from the photos here, is moderately rugose, medium green, and exceptionally healthy in the Kansas sunshine. That first bloom took forever to open, taking 6 days to go from showing color like the bud at the top of the picture, to fully open, teasing me every day with progress, but not enough until July 7th to blog about.
'Polareis', registration name 'STRonin', has a mildly double bloom (about 25 petals), which open up blush pink and then fade to perfect white. References tell me that my tiny bush will grow to 5-7 feet tall and wide someday, with occasional repeat bloom and that it is hardy to Zone 3. There is a moderate rugosa-like fragrance. 'Polareis' also goes by the names of Polar Ice®, 'Polarisx' and 'Ritausma', the latter its original name near the Baltic region. 'Polareis' is a diploid, the offspring of a cross between R. rugosa var plena 'Regal' X 'Abelzieds'. Bred by Rieksta in 1963, it was introduced in Germany in 1991, and then in the USA by Star Roses in 2005 as Polar Ice®. Although Suzy Verrier seems to have been involved in its cross-identification as 'Ritausma', she doesn't list the rose in my 1991 copy of Rosa Rugosa, nor is it listed in the first edition of Osborne's Hardy Roses or any other of my rose books. In the magazine Perennials, in 2001, Suzy Verrier did publish an article titled "Rugged, Riveting Rugosas" which does describe 'Polareis' "at the top of my list" and states that she believes it to be the same as 'Valentina Grizodubova'. It seems like this rose keeps getting passed from gardener to gardener and renamed each time it passes.
For me, I'll always remember it as Gean Ann's Rugosa. Gean Ann, 'Polareis' does bloom now on the Kansas prairie. Thank you again for the gift, and for thus inspiring the double pun in today's title.