
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Monday, August 22, 2011
50 and Counting!

Sunday, August 21, 2011
Final (Touch) Daylily
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'Final Touch' daylily |
This is 'Final Touch', a late-blooming daylily as one would expect from its name, but I never expected it to start blooming quite THIS late. This beautiful diploid has 4 inch soft bicolored pink and cream flowers with a green throat and it is quite fragrant. It is classified as winter dormant, but of course that means nothing to gardeners in Kansas since every daylily is dormant here.
'Final Touch' belongs to a group of daylilies labeled as "Trophytakers®." I had never heard the term before, and my Gogglefoo powers must be weak today, because I still can't definitively find out what organization or individual is behind it. The original website for the group seems to be down. From hints here and there, I think these may be selections by famed daylily breeder Darrell Apps of Woodside nursery; not all are his daylilies, but I believe he was the evaluator of all of them. I was able to find out that it is a group of 50 outstanding daylilies that must all bloom for a minimum of 42 days, more than double the average daylily. I can't find what climate they are supposed to bloom for 42 days in, but if Mr. Apps selected them all, it must have been in Kentucky. Certainly, any daylily that starts to bloom in Kansas in late August may not have 42 days left until first frost. Trophytaker® daylilies must be vigorous growers and hardy to Zone 5. They must be "beautiful" (however that may have been determined), the foliage must remain attractive till late in the season, and they must be insect and disease resistant. I don't know why I've never heard the term, because I grow a number of the other Trophytaker® daylilies; 'Barbara Mitchell', Red Rum', and 'Joylene Nichole', among others.
Regardless, I view 'Final Touch' as a fitting end to my daylily season. If there has to be a rear end to the long string of daylilies, at least it's a beautiful rear end.
Friday, August 19, 2011
Death of a Monk
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'Jens Munk', 8/19/11 |
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'Jens Munk', 4/24/11 |
I'd been watching and nursing this beautiful shrub rose along for over a year, pampering it with judicious compost and water, but now that it has given up the struggle, I'm determined to investigate the death until the culprit is identified and blame is assigned. As regular readers of my blog know, I first noticed the rose had a problem last fall when approximately half of the bush suddenly died and I talked about it then in this blog post. At the time, I was blaming the late summer drought we had last year and you can bet that I lavished some extra care and water on it this year, especially in the long stretch of 100+F temps we had in July. It started out the year pretty decently, with the remaining bush leafing out well and looking healthy as you can see at the left. A couple of new canes had sprouted in the vicinity of the dead ones I had pruned, and I had hopes that the bush was going to recover. Alas, in the span of a few short days the rest of the bush went from green, to brown and shriveled, and it did it in the period after we had finally had some cool relief from the drought and summer heat stress.
I'm slightly torn between digging it up to get "at the root of the problem" or leaving the roots alone in case some surviving tender rootlet wants to regrow. This rose has never suckered as most Rugosa hybrids do, so I don't have the benefit of being able to get an easy start of it. I've decided to uproot it to inspect the roots anyway. I can't imagine what the issue was; no visible disease, no rot in the canes I cut off last year, no rodent activity in the area, no sign of iron chlorosis. I've never seen crown or rose gall here on my roses and there is no evidence of it on the surface of this own-root plant. The other roses closest to it, including 'Robusta', 'Blanc Double de Coubert', 'Alchymist', and 'Louise Odier' , are all doing well and look healthy. At least two of those are also Rugosa hybrids, so I can't blame the bloodlines. I'll examine the root system, the canes, and also test a soil sample for pH. One thing I'm sure of is that the rose didn't get too dry this year.
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Bountiful Bourbon
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'Coquette des Blanches' |
It has taken only four years to realize that the Bourbon rose 'Coquette des Blanches' was a great selection for me to grow here in Kansas. My records show that I planted it in 2007, but I have absolutely no idea where I came across this rose. Several posters to the Internet talk about getting it as a bagged cheap plant at Home Depot, so perhaps that was where I found it in the spring of '07. I also don't know, other than the fact that I love the Bourbon fragrance, why I thought this Zone 6 rated rose would grow in my 5B climate. But grow it does, and it rivals the continuous blooming shrub roses in my garden for floriferousness in the summer heat.
'Coquette des Blanches' was a 1871 introduction by Mons. Lacharme, who was reportedly trying to breed a pure white rose. Unfortunately for Mons. Lacharme, 'Coquette des Blanches' isn't white, but rather a blush white or pale pink. The French translation of the name, "vain of the white ones" is probably a snooty comment on the impure color. At least it wasn't grubbed out at birth, but was recognized as a beautiful and valuable rose to pass on to civilization. The flower is fully double and slighly cupped, with a strong Bourbon scent. It often opens to show that little green pip at the center that I appreciate in Old Garden Roses. It stands about 5 feet tall here in the Flint Hills at 4 years of age, with a nice vase-like shape and healthy foliage, but I've seen descriptions from California where this rose makes it to 9 feet tall. I can attest that it is hardier here than the Zone 6 it is commonly rated at because I've seen no winter dieback at all over 4 winters here in 5B. No blackspot either, and I never spray it.
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06/29/2011, 2nd bloom |
If and when you can find it, give 'CdB' a try. I wish I could tell you where to obtain it, but you won't regret it if you get it in the ground.
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