Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Sunday, December 22, 2024
Sweet Dreams Are Made of This
Saturday, July 31, 2021
New Life, New Roses
The gorgeous little blush pink darling seen here to the right is the second bloom of one of two seedlings I was able to keep alive this year, from the first tiny sprout in late February clear through to transplantation into the garden proper. I'm disturbed that I had better light this morning (see the movie at the bottom), but had my iPhone set to "video" and when I went to rephotograph her for this afternoon, the weather is cloudy, and sprinkling, and the light is terrible for her.
Her first bloom, shown to the left as she opened in late April, showed me a lot of promise, a full double with delicate petals of a faint pink hue, but I am more thrilled to see now that she is remonant, blooming again today with two other buds waiting in the wings.She's been healthy so far, protected from the rabbits by her milk jug collar and under full Kansas sun, and the bloom at the top appears undamaged by our heat and the rain, but of course she has to go a long way to prove herself before I trouble to name her. Most important will be her winter hardiness, for I will not protect her from weather, just from marauding deer as the fall approaches. A chicken wire cage is coming soon!
I have another new seedling, planted a few yards away, also healthy but she has yet to bloom. Of course, I have no idea of the provenance of either rose although the foliage of each resembles its sister; both are the unknown orphans of a bunch of rose hips gathered in a hurry as the winter closed in and planted into a peat moss garden in the house under artificial lights. Most of the hips were from Hybrid Rugosas, but neither seedling shows any signs yet of Rugosa heritage. From her appearance, the one that has bloomed looks most like the English Rose 'Heritage' from my garden, the same delicate petals, similar bloom color and leaf form. Sadly, I have no idea if I grabbed hips from 'Heritage' during my fall frenzy.
Sunday, September 6, 2020
Summer's End, Spring's Promise
Sunday, June 30, 2019
Thoughtful Rest
| 'Fru Dagmar Hastrup |
| 'Fru Dagmar Hastrup' second bloom |
| 'Fru Dagmar Hastrup' hip |
| 'Foxi Pavement' hip |
Sunday, November 13, 2016
Baby Got Hips
I like big hips and I can not lieYou other gardeners can't deny
That when a rose shows up with its foliage rough and tough
And puts some red balls all around
You get glad, want to make some jam
'Cause those hips ain't full of spam
Seeds in those hips she's wearing
I'm hooked and I can't stop staring
Oh baby, I want to plant them wit'cha
And take your picture
Sorry, but once again, Baby Got Back seems to be my muse for starting a post. Our first frost is finally upon us,almost 4 weeks late, and 'Fru Dagmar Hastrup' is ready, ripe hips shining in the sun. These hips are the biggest and juiciest of the rugosas that I grow, and in these, I can finally see why wartime Britain relied on rose hips as a source of Vitamin C. The first hip, at the top, is larger than a quarter, and the second is nearly that large. Many sources state that these hips should be accompanied by fall color changes in the foliage, but I have yet to see my bush provide any color this fall. Perhaps she will develop it later, once that first frost does its damage.
I do intend to plant the seeds within this scarlet dreams this winter and try for a crop of Rugosa hybrids. After the loss of so many roses to Rose Rosette, I might as well hope and pray that 'Fru Dagmar Hastrup' was indiscreet with one of the Griffith Buck or English roses in the vicinity, making little roses that could have some RR resistance. A gardener can hope.
Saturday, November 28, 2015
Ice Time
I worry for the trees, especially the proud but precarious Redbud to the west. The favorite of Mrs. ProfessorRoush, a stiff wind could undo it in seconds, cracking it to kindling in a contest of will. The existing gale already broke the resolve of the garden's photographer, sending him fleeing into the warmth of house, to the fire of hearth. ![]() |
| 'Carefree Beauty' |
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| 'Fru Dagmar Hastrup' |
The cherub of the peony bed presides over all, calm and quiet, chaste and cool, reminding that this day was anticipated, nay expected, in the course of seasons. The gardener heeds the stoic stone at last, slowing heartbeat, resting thoughts, reassured that the garden will survive again the orbit of years.
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Do My Hips Look Big?
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| 'High Voltage' rose hips |
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| 'Morden Centennial' rose hips |
Because they do, you know, make nice natural ornaments in the few days in Manhattan Kansas when the snow falls. Most of them do, anyway. It never seems to work out exactly like I wanted it to. Some roses that I didn't expect to develop hips are reluctant to rebloom and are covered with hips (like 'High Voltage' that I wrote about recently). Others are widely touted to have large, tomato-red hips. The Hybrid Rugosa 'Purple Pavement' is such a rose, but this summer, the large red hips swelled, showed promise, and then shriveled. First, they turned into reddish-orange prunes like the picture at the right, and then they just turned brown and ugly like the picture below. Who really wants to show off a bunch of prun-ey shriveled old hips unless they have no choice?
I don't imagine these dried hips of 'Purple Pavement' would make very good eating, either. I'm aware that rose hips are rich in Vitamin C and were harvested in Britain in WWII to make rose hip syrup as a vitamin supplement for children. Rose hips are also promoted for herbal teas, sauces, soups, jams, and tarts. These days, health experts far and wide are proclaiming the anti-cancer and cardiovascular benefits of the anthocyanins and other phytochemicals contained in rose hips. I ask you, looking at the picture at the left, would you expect any medicinal benefits other than as a purgative? They have even been used to control pain from osteoarthritis in a 2007 Danish study. Maybe so, but I ain't eating them. For now, I'm quite happy to leave my rose hips for the birds or to let them drop to the ground and occasionally grow more little roses. As long as I don't have to deadhead the bushes. And maybe it is my aberrant "Y" chromosome, but I don't care if you think my hips are big. I think they're beautiful.
Thursday, August 30, 2012
Morden Centennial
Somewhere out there in the gardens of the world, someone else MUST be growing the AgCanada offering 'Morden Centennial', but information on this rose seems to be difficult to obtain, with few commenters on the normal sites. I've looked in a number of places, and seen links to many others that are currently unavailable, but the real value of 'Morden Centennial' seems to be a very large secret (until I reveal it to you below!) A wonderful website at the University of Minnesota does place 'Morden Centennial' in its list of roses "recommended for low maintenance landscapes," but,f you'll pardon my digression, perhaps the most useful chart on that web page is the chart of roses that were NOT recommended. The comment section of the second list detailed why each rose was not recommended, and was most interesting because they confirmed my impression, for 'Morden Fireglow' for instance, that it was a blackspot magnet, but also because the authors tossed out the Grootendorst roses for "lack of fragrance". Do all roses HAVE to have fragrance? No one seems to care that our fall garden standout Crape Myrtles or Rose of Sharon are very fragrant, do they?
'Morden Centennial' is a medium or bright pink Shrub rose, with fair, but not exceptional repeat bloom. It was bred by Henry H. Marshall in 1972, and released in the AgCanada Parkland series in 1980, just in time for the centennial of the city of Morden, Manitoba, founded in 1882. The mildly-fragrant blooms are large and double, of about 40 petals, and often cluster-flowered on small stems, but they have the drawback of going quickly from bud to completely open form. The foliage is dark green and semi-glossy, and it seems pretty resistant to blackspot here in my climate. The bush form is vase-shaped and 3-4 foot tall, with stiff, thick canes and moderately-wicked thorns. 'Morden Centennial' is an offspring of a complex cross, with heritage from 'Prairie Princess', 'R. arkansana', 'Assiniboine', 'White Bouquet', and 'J.W. Fargo' in its gene pool. 'Morden Centennial' is rated hardy to zone 2B, but I read an entry from a Minnesota cabin in Zone 3 that stated the plants didn't do well over several winters in Zone 3, but did better when transplanted to a Zone 4 residence. I've never seen winter kill of any kind on 'Morden Centennial' here in Kansas.
I would not dispute that 'Morden Centennial' puts on a nice garden display during peak bloom, but the repeat blooms are sporadic enough that I wouldn't put it front and center in a small garden. The great secret about 'Morden Centennial', though, is its fabulous contribution to the winter garden. If you are not a fanatical dead-header (as I am not), this rose puts on numerous large bright orange hips to brighten up the winter garden in a display that will match any of the winter hollies or viburnums. I'm sorry that my picture, at the right, is not taken from a garden covered in snow, but truly, the bush is covered with large orange balls that can be seen from across the garden. Those hips are almost 3/4ths inch across and they get ever more bright red-orange as winter goes on. This rose ornaments itself for Christmas, so you won't have to.










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