Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Thursday, June 25, 2020
Brazen Rabbit
Saturday, June 20, 2020
Thistle Excite You
'Kaveri' |
'Spider Man' daylily |
Wavy-Leaf thistle |
Sunday, June 14, 2020
Deep Purple Passions
Mirror, Mirror on the wall, who's the purple-ist rose of all? My rose garden was deliciously purple last week, plenty of purple pulchritude (I always wanted to use that word) to lure me down into the garden for a closer view of the sumptuous rich colors.
'Basye's Purple' |
'Charles de Mills' |
'La Reine' |
Another purplish Hybrid Perpetual, 'La Reine' has been in my garden for almost a decade and it has been a trouble-free, if perhaps only mildly interesting, bush. It requires little or no extra care and has been free of Rose Rosette disease despite it's placement next to my ailing and super-affected 'American Pillar'. The violet blooms are fragile, almost dainty, but it's exposure is primarily to morning sun so it doesn't suffer from the hot afternoon sun.
'Orpheline de Juliet' |
I raved last year about my young deep purple Gallica 'Orpheline de Juliet', and this year's display was no different. Those purple buttons are just jewels against the lighter green matte foliage of this rose and the fragrance is, yes, "to die for." I simply don't understand yet why this rose isn't more widely grown because it was a fabulous addition to my garden.
'Souvenir du Docteur Jamain' |
'Souvenir du Docteur Jamain' has become one of my favorite old garden roses, and is one of the only Hybrid Perpetuals I've found to be healthy and unfailingly hardy in my garden. I can count on it for a nicely presented spring bloom, although I question how "perpetual" it is; followup blooms are rare in my garden. It's deeply scented and has a nice vase-like form, and is completely sans thorns so that I can bring those blossoms inside with a risk of bloodshed.
'Tuscany Superb' |
'Tuscany Superb' is a delicious deep purple in my garden, but I have yet to decide if this old Gallica is going to survive Kansas. My original plant struggles, a bare couple of feet high and of straggly form. It has provided only a handful of blooms each of the 8 years it has lived in my garden and always looks on the verge of perishing, although it has suckered about three feet away into another small struggling bush. I love the color, but the blooms only last a day in the full Kansas sun before they shrivel into blackness.
So, which is your favorite? Do you agree, with me, that Dr. Robert Basye's creation is the winner? Is 'Orpheline de Juliet' in the running? The Gallicas and Hybrid Perpetuals have their fair share of mauve-purple hues, but most are vulnerable to the sun and lack stature. In fact, writing this, I'm struck that helpmefind.com/roses lists several of those roses as 3'-5' while they struggle to reach even three feet tall here in Kansas. 'Orpheline' is pretty in the garden, in a squat sort of way. Who does the mirror choose as the most scrumptiously purple? Who might get a chance in your garden?
Tuesday, June 9, 2020
Survivor Again
She only produces one crop of these bejeweled flowers each year, but she blooms over such a long period that I simply don't care. The blooms hang on and hang on, lust on display for weeks. The first photo of this bush, taken on 5/24, was almost a week after the very first bloom on it; the second photo from a different angle mere days later, and the third, taken on 6/]7, still in full flower and under full sun and absolutely no fade of the scarlet in those velvet petals despite the 90ºF temperatures for most of last week. It was only today that I noticed the petals were turning to fuchsia and beginning to drop, her peak at least over and out.
5/24/2020 |
5/26/2020 |
6/7/2020 |
As I said, not much form as a garden bush, but I'd put up the individual blooms over any other rose in the garden. 'Survivor', she is and survivor, she will be, sunup to sundown, spectacular and deliciously red. As the garden pauses between roses and summer, she carries on, bridging one cycle of the garden to the next, carrying the fire in a relay until the flames reappear in the nearby budding daylilies, red forever into fall.
Saturday, June 6, 2020
Moje Hammarberg
Moje may be a native Swede, but he fits none of the typical statuesque stereotype that a Midwest American expects from that far Northern country. Moje is not a Viking warrior reincarnated in rose form, he is more representative of a squat little hobbit hiding behind the more heroic figures in the garden. Of unknown parentage, the only thing for certain about Moje is that he must have some Rosa rugosa 'Rubra' in his immediate forebears, expressed in classic thick, wrinkled and very dense foliage and a distinct tendency towards the mauve petals of the Rugosa genes. There is, as expected, no blackspot or disease on this rose and he seems impervious to rose rosette virus as expected of that foliage.
The large blooms of Moje, however, are not nearly as tidy as the plant and are, in fact, a fairly unimpressive 17-25 petal mop head of mauve crepe similar in appearance to the larger and more vigorous 'Hanza'. Suzy Verrier, writing of Moje in her Rosa Rugosa, charitably describes the 3-4" wide blooms as "lovely, large, and asymmetrical," which is a very nice way of saying that they have form, but no substance, color without sophistication. Peter Beales, in "Roses" describes the blooms as "nodding," and I would agree that they seem to hang from the bush to some degree. Moje does, however have a strong spicy Rugosa fragrance and reportedly forms large hips in the fall, which I have yet to see. He repeats sporadically but always has a few blooms around to display, albeit the display is nothing to get especially excited about.
You can probably tell that I'm less than enthusiastic about Moje Hammarberg, disease-proof as he may be. It's not that he's a bad rose, he's just...uninspiring, although the members of helpmefind.com/rose disagrees and label him "excellent." At this stage of my experience with him, I'd recommend him as a decent basis for a rugosa hedge, perhaps for those living in salt-prone regions, but I wouldn't expect him to be the centerpiece of a garden. He's a workhorse, not a fancied up Dressage, prancing around in splendor.
Sunday, May 31, 2020
Can You See Me Now?

Now if I only knew what this rose was named. On my notes, this is the 'York and Lancaster' rose, which I obtained as a sucker from the KSU rose garden during pruning one year. Only it isn't because 'York and Lancaster' is a striped or variably colored Damask and this rose only blooms bright pink and I'm pretty sure it is a Gallica. In fact, my bet is that it's the Apothecary's Rose, or Rosa gallica 'Officinalis', a rose I have no written record of, but seem to recall obtaining at one time or another and must have found somewhere. It has the right size semidouble blooms, is low-growing, and suckers like crazy. I do have Rosa mundi, which is a candidate for the original 'York and Lancaster' rose, in another bed for sure.
Wednesday, May 27, 2020
Perfect White Roses
'Madame Hardy' |
'Blanc Double de Coubert' |
No, it's my roses, timidly opening one by one, who are exceeding expectations this spring. Ravaged by rose rosette disease, unpruned and sawfly-stricken, they are nonetheless defiant to the elements and demanding of my worship.
'Madame Plantier' |
'Sir Thomas Lipton' |
'Marie Bugnet' |
It's 'Marie Bugnet', on this gloomy evening, that brightens the darkness, fans my fires and summons my smile. I'm captured by her beauty, and enthralled by her immaculate peignoir. Don't you agree? Pray with me now, please, for her safety, for her glory, to shine forever in my garden.
Monday, May 25, 2020
Baptisia Musings
Baptisia australis |
Baptisia bracteata |
Baptisia var ProfessorRoush |
Baptisia alba |
Unknown NOTBaptisia |
Sunday, May 17, 2020
Catchweed Annihilation
My enemy this year seems to be a world-beating crop of Galium aparine, commonly called bedstraw, catchweed or goosegrass, that is spreading like a wildfire on the prairie before a wind. I tried to ignore it, then placed it on my list of "Things To Get To" rather than confronting the shiny horde, but there came a time when I could no longer turn my head from the onslaught. I've always seen a little of it around, wisps here or there trying to hide beneath daylilies or consorting with cosmos, but this year it seems to be searching for its own Lebensraum, living space, poking up through every green perennial or shrub in a bid for world domination.
It's satisfying watching that stringy, clingy weed disappear from my garden. I cleared it two weeks ago and I'm only just now seeing a few wisps from stragglers try to stealthily emerge from the shadows. I find it much less daunting to reach down and pluck out a few stems here and there as I pass by a bed than it is to confront a vast multitude of creeping contagion. Take it from me, attack your weeding head on, because Neville Chamberlain's policy of appeasement doesn't work any better in the garden than it did in history. Better for us, now as before, to follow Churchill's advice, "....to wage war, by sea, land, and air, with all our might and with all the strength that God can give us...(our aim is) victory, victory at all costs, victory in spite of all terror, victory, however long and hard the road may be."
Saturday, May 9, 2020
Lessons in Tenacity
I feel, in this time of quarantine, a kinship with this tree, a bond forged by the urge of life to grow and expand despite the constraints around it. My adherence to stay-at-home edicts from local "authorities" suffers from both my lack of paranoia about catching the virus and my lack of faith in those authorities. I do wear a mask in public, despite knowing the science and all-the-time wondering why I bother. Running "crucial" errands, the number of which expands exponentially with my cabin fever, I often think of the quote on my office refrigerator at work, purportedly from Marilyn Monroe, which reads "Ever notice that 'what the hell' is always the right answer?" Yes, I recognize that subscribing to guidance from a woman who tragically passed away in the fullness of life may not be the wisest choice. It is, however, more satisfying, and soul-serving than listening to nonstop gloom and doom from the news.
Time will tell, both for the tree and for us. Will we wither now, paralyzed by fear of the world outside our holes, or will we grow on, breaking the barriers and pushing against the sky? Me, I'm betting on life and the spirit of this tree. Staying in the hole is not an option.
Saturday, May 2, 2020
Guilty Gardening
For whatever reason, I have twice recently succumbed to the wiles of blatant consumerism. The first was when I spied this plastic Zen Flamingo during a grocery run for milk and eggs. I did not ask myself why a large grocery would be selling garden statues in the middle of a pandemic. I did not ask myself where I would place it in the garden or more importantly WHY I wanted it. I did not remind myself that I hate fake flamingos in the garden and in the past have poked fun at every pink plastic abomination I've seen. I simply looked for the price and, of course, found it on sale, marked down to acceptably-priced luxury from its original fictitious retail level.
The worst part of these narcissistic indulgences is that my guilt for breaking every self-imposed rule of tasteful garden practice has not yet caught up with the internal endorphin release from their purchases. Fresh from the damage of late spring freezes and snowfalls, a dispirited gardener has no apparent limit to shame. I would argue that the garden lantern is, after all, quite pretty in a faux-Vegas-glitter sort of way. Moreover, the Zen Flamingo makes a fitting partner to my long beloved Totally Zen Frog, don't you think? Two small echoed passages joining in the symphony of my garden?
Alternatively, I could just own up to a complete collapse of any sense of decent garden style and refinement and place all the blame on COVID-19. Surely, that sounds much better than "I lost my mind during quarantine."
Saturday, April 25, 2020
Tulips and Tail Wags
This morning's blog is brought to you through the photographic artistry of Mrs. ProfessorRoush, the exquisite sunlight of the Flint Hills, and the antics of my beautiful bestie, Bella. Credit also should be given to the tulips, standing bright and bold in a harsh land, and to their benefactor, a colleague who brought me these all the way from the Netherlands. Yes, these are real, authentic Dutch tulips!
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