Rosa 'Prairie Harvest', 10/22/11 |
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Saturday, October 22, 2011
October GGW Photo Contest
I've been making photographs for October's Gardening Gone Wild Photo Contest for weeks, trying to find just the right composition to fill what I felt was the nebulous theme of "fill the frame." The contest rules, as I understand them, don't allow post-cropping of the photograph (the entire "canvas" must be used) so it creates a bit of a challenge to allow my camera lens to do the cropping. I've taken wide lens garden vistas, and "whole plant" photographs and closeup after closeup, and before today, I believed the hardest part of the challenge was to make my own choice from among many possibilities. Right up, that is, until I found this solitary, late bloom of the Griffith Buck rose 'Prairie Harvest', and then, even before the picture was taken, I knew I had my entry. She was perfect, and delicate and a deeper yellow than the blooms of high summer, and even our recent first October freeze couldn't dim her glory. So here she is, immortal hereafter, my "harvest" of the memories of past summer's sunshine:
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
(White) Blackberry Dreams

Well, I'm pleased to show you that, thanks to a generous benefactor, Burbank's White Blackberry now grows in my garden. Last fall, I received 6 cane runners in the mail and needless to say, I treated them like gold. Hedging my bets, I planted the two strongest canes outside in the main garden, put two weaker ones in another more protected spot, and tried growing the remaining two in a sunny window through the winter. Only the two that were strongest survived, but those two are one more that I needed to get the strain going here. I can taste those delicious berries already, even though the floracanes won't be mature till next year.

The kind gentleman who provided the rooted cuttings must remain anonymous because I don't want him deluged. Deluged, that is, by the hundreds of requests that I anticipate will come from all over next summer when I show you my fabulous white berries. But I will, here and ever after, acknowledge my debt to his generosity and say Thank You, in public. They survived my meager care, buddy, and now grow again in the Flint Hills.
Monday, October 17, 2011
TGIA (Thank God It's Autumn)
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'Touch of Class' |
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'Prairie Harvest' |
The colors and hues of roses are spectacular and sometimes different in the Fall here! I don't see the pink blush on the petals of this 'Prairie Harvest' from buds that pre-bake in the summer heat, and I believe the demure tint added to the normal light yellow increases the allure of this rose.
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'Lavande' |
The lavenders can often be deeper and bolder toned at this time in the fall. This is 'Lavande', a floribunda that I purchased cheap from a local and now out-of-business discount box store many years ago. I suspected at the time that I was just buying a mislabeled 'Angel Face', but there really is a 'Lavande', a florists rose, bred in Canada by Bruce Rennie.
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'Granada' |
'Granada' shows off its bi-color blooms and its scent here when the summer sun doesn't roast it into submission within hours. This rose is one of Mrs. ProfessorRoush's favorites. I can take it or leave it, personally.
Have you noticed that "orange roses" actually really look a little orange as Halloween closes in? This miniature rose, whose name I've long forgotten, always picks October to remind me that it still deserves a place in my garden.
Viva La Autumn!
Thursday, October 13, 2011
IoBelle Idolation
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'Iobelle' |
'IoBelle' was a very early release by Dr. Buck, clear back during the Kennedy administration in 1962. I've seen the rose referred to as "Iowa Belle", but the Iowa State Website says 'Iobelle' and so I shall call it here. The Iowa State Website doesn't say much else about the rose, so that site isn't very helpful in terms of the bloom or the height and spread of this rose. The Cherry Capital Rose Society website noted that some consider it to be tender and persnickety, but go on to say that those attributes don't hold true in Zone 4 Michigan, where the rose is fully hardy and vigorous. Oddly HelpMeFind lists the rose as hardy to USDA 7B and warmer, but that statement is just flat out wrong. It is frustrating when a good rose gets bad press, isn't it?

'Iobelle' was a cross of pink Grandiflora 'Dean Collins' with the famous Hybrid Tea 'Peace'. I didn't know that before, or I would have planted it closer to Brownell's 'Charlotte Brownell', another hardy 'Peace' offspring, for comparison. And if I haven't enticed you enough with this rose yet, I'll leave you with the knowledge that this is an almost thornless rose for those who search out those varieties. This one is destined to become a star in my garden. It has already won me some big brownie points with Mrs. ProfessorRoush.
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