Earlier this week, ProfessorRoush noticed the proximity of his third anniversary of blogging on Garden Musings and began toying with the thought of a deep, reflective blog entry to commemorate the occasion. Since then, I've mulled over ideas and chased after flickering images and begged the garden deities for a theme. I wanted to find a way to tell you (and me) what I think I've learned from blogging; to tell you how 525 blog entries have changed me and changed my writing and why I may not quite be done. Alas, a useful blog muse just kept eluding my efforts. Until Friday morning, that is, as I was leaving for work and experiencing an odd feeling that something was undone. Something was calling me from the garden.
Since I was not in a frantic hurry to make a living that morning, I took a moment just to walk out back onto the slightly wet patio and listen to what the garden had to say. My back garden, softly lit from the glowing dawn and covered in glistening jewels from an early morning sprinkle, waited patiently for me to find its secret. Glancing around, I focused quickly on a Northern Bayberry, a fine and nondescript green shrub of my landscape, that I otherwise rarely notice. This time it drew my attention by shouting at me, a dying branch brown against the rest of the thick olive-green foliage, demanding attention. And there it was, suddenly there. My blogging metaphor.
Somehow, my garden chose to surprise me once again, as it does over and over, this time unveiling a volunteer Redbud tree within the bayberry, strong, 8 feet tall and healthy. This adolescent woody treasure must be every bit of three years old and all this time it has been protected from my pruning shears, hidden within the heart of the nurturing bayberry bush. Despite my claims that I pay close attention to my garden, this stealthy native has exposed the lie, laid bare the fantasy that I'm in charge of my garden. It is completely out of place, this Redbud, and it will someday demand that the nearby lilac and cherry tree and perennials bow to its dominance, but I can't remove it now. Such a will to live must only be respected and cherished.
And therein lies the story of this blog. The entries are sometimes informative and sometimes inane, sometimes funny and sometimes foolish. There are bad pieces that simply bomb, as unsatisfying to me as they must be to you. But occasionally, just as an occasional surprise to myself, I find a lyrical voice or pen a written phrase that lifts me up and calms my desires. I hope and believe this is happening more often. In a personal blog there are no copy writers, no editors to correct my mistakes, no rewriting once the "publish" button is pressed. As it is cast upon the ether, the writing is either good or it isn't, but there it is. Malcolm Gladwell, in his book Outliers, has made the observation that exceptional talent is not just born, it requires 10,000 hours of practice to arrive. If he's right, then I have only 9500 more blogs to go before I'm complete.
As I wrote on the day that I started this blog, three years past, I write not out of narcissism or for profit, I write simply because I must write. If you find it interesting to follow the twists and turns of my mental meanderings, then please, keep reading. And I'll keep trying to surprise you, just like the shy Redbud popping into my garden.
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Sunday, July 28, 2013
Thursday, July 25, 2013
Pink Poppy Perfection
During the three short years of existence of this blog and its 520+ entries, I can't believe that I haven't written about or shown you a single photo of one of my favorite garden plants. At least, I think I haven't, because one sometimes loses track of 500 blog entries and searchable text can only carry me on its back just so far.
This beautiful salmon-pink pompom is present in my garden as a legacy, a descendant of seed given to my father by the father of a childhood friend of mine, who grew them in a large garden en masse for their "wow" effect every year. I'm not positive of the exact species, but I suspect that this is a plant sometimes described as Papaver laciniatum, a highly double and deeply lobed variant of the bread poppy. Notice how carefully I'm dancing around the likely accurate species name? All I know for sure is that here and there in my garden, when the cold, wet soil is disturbed enough in early spring to allow this annual to take hold and grow, I get these gorgeous flowers back as a gift in mid-summer. They pop up at random spots for me, often near desirable plants where I slow down my weeding enough to identify what living thing I'm uprooting. They self-seed effortlessly, and all I have to do is to avoid hoeing them out when they are mere babies.
The plant itself has a nice blue-green shade and healthy foliage, rarely shows insect damage or fungus, and doesn't care if rain comes often or doesn't come at all. The leaves are lobed enough to be a mite prickly, although I can pull the plant bare-handed when I need to. I don't pull them bare-handed though, because if you do, your hand gets covered in the sticky, white sap of the plant. As they begin to flower, first you see these swelling, drooping buds, which later stand up proudly on their short day of open life. After the petals fall, the seed head magically becomes a shaker that opens when the seeds dry so that a few seeds are flung by each gust of wind or nudge of a passing animal. What a perfect plant to place in Kansas; a drought-tolerant self-sowing annual weed that is distributed farther each time the wind gusts get stronger! Even better, they bloom at the height of heat and summer, as other flowers are fading and before the ornamental grasses claim the garden for their own.
I only regret that I am terrible at sowing them to come up where I want them. I've tried mass plantings, but I sow them too thickly and they don't thrive, or I sow them too late and then they don't grow, or it is not wet enough for them to get established. I also suspect that they may need a period of cold stratification to make them start to grow. Someday, I'll figure out the formula and then I'll have a "wow" factor in my garden too. Until then, I'm thankful for this passalong plant and the Kansas winds that spread it far.
This beautiful salmon-pink pompom is present in my garden as a legacy, a descendant of seed given to my father by the father of a childhood friend of mine, who grew them in a large garden en masse for their "wow" effect every year. I'm not positive of the exact species, but I suspect that this is a plant sometimes described as Papaver laciniatum, a highly double and deeply lobed variant of the bread poppy. Notice how carefully I'm dancing around the likely accurate species name? All I know for sure is that here and there in my garden, when the cold, wet soil is disturbed enough in early spring to allow this annual to take hold and grow, I get these gorgeous flowers back as a gift in mid-summer. They pop up at random spots for me, often near desirable plants where I slow down my weeding enough to identify what living thing I'm uprooting. They self-seed effortlessly, and all I have to do is to avoid hoeing them out when they are mere babies.
The plant itself has a nice blue-green shade and healthy foliage, rarely shows insect damage or fungus, and doesn't care if rain comes often or doesn't come at all. The leaves are lobed enough to be a mite prickly, although I can pull the plant bare-handed when I need to. I don't pull them bare-handed though, because if you do, your hand gets covered in the sticky, white sap of the plant. As they begin to flower, first you see these swelling, drooping buds, which later stand up proudly on their short day of open life. After the petals fall, the seed head magically becomes a shaker that opens when the seeds dry so that a few seeds are flung by each gust of wind or nudge of a passing animal. What a perfect plant to place in Kansas; a drought-tolerant self-sowing annual weed that is distributed farther each time the wind gusts get stronger! Even better, they bloom at the height of heat and summer, as other flowers are fading and before the ornamental grasses claim the garden for their own.
I only regret that I am terrible at sowing them to come up where I want them. I've tried mass plantings, but I sow them too thickly and they don't thrive, or I sow them too late and then they don't grow, or it is not wet enough for them to get established. I also suspect that they may need a period of cold stratification to make them start to grow. Someday, I'll figure out the formula and then I'll have a "wow" factor in my garden too. Until then, I'm thankful for this passalong plant and the Kansas winds that spread it far.
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Striped and Rugose
I have Scott Keneda of Red Dirt Roses to thank for alerting me to the fact that my lust for striped roses was missing a key player; a striped rose that would rebloom consistently, wouldn't get blackspot, and would stand up to colder climates without blinking. That rose is Ralph Moore's 'Moore's Striped Rugosa', a 1987 introduction with the registration name of 'MORbeauty'.
Ralph Moore bred 'Moore's Striped Rugosa' from a complex seed parent named "9 stripe" crossed with 'Rugosa Magnifica'. According to rosarian Paul Barden, the stripes come from 'Ferdinand Pichard' four generations back in the seed parent. It was not released until 2005, when it was introduced by Sequoia Nursery, Moore Miniature Roses Historic Archive, a long time to wait for such an exceptional rose.
'Moore's Striped Rugosa' is slow growing for me, about a foot high in its first full summer, but healthy, with nice dark green Rugosa foliage. It has been an almost continual bloomer since it was just a single stick with leaves, those beautiful uniquely striped and fully double flowers popping up again and again. The petals have a red and white striped upper with an almost completely red reverse; the red itself is slightly to the blue side, much like 'Ferdinand Pichard' in hat regard. Blooms average about 3.5 inches in diameter for me, and have a mild Rugosa-like fragrance. They start out with hybrid-tea form and end up a mildly disheveled cup form, and so far they stand up well to the worst heat of summer. Most references tell me that the bush will grow 4-5 feet in diameter and the mildly rugose foliage tells me that it will be blackspot free here. It certainly has been so far, and it survived winter unprotected and cane-hardy.
The nicest thing about 'Moore's Striped Rugosa' is that it is a welcome change from the strong Rugosa genes of mauve-rose-purplish roses and single or semi-double blooms. I think this one will be quite a show piece when it reaches it's mature size. Does anyone know if it sets hips? Oh, that's probably too much to ask for, isn't it? No rose is perfect.
Ralph Moore bred 'Moore's Striped Rugosa' from a complex seed parent named "9 stripe" crossed with 'Rugosa Magnifica'. According to rosarian Paul Barden, the stripes come from 'Ferdinand Pichard' four generations back in the seed parent. It was not released until 2005, when it was introduced by Sequoia Nursery, Moore Miniature Roses Historic Archive, a long time to wait for such an exceptional rose.
'Moore's Striped Rugosa' is slow growing for me, about a foot high in its first full summer, but healthy, with nice dark green Rugosa foliage. It has been an almost continual bloomer since it was just a single stick with leaves, those beautiful uniquely striped and fully double flowers popping up again and again. The petals have a red and white striped upper with an almost completely red reverse; the red itself is slightly to the blue side, much like 'Ferdinand Pichard' in hat regard. Blooms average about 3.5 inches in diameter for me, and have a mild Rugosa-like fragrance. They start out with hybrid-tea form and end up a mildly disheveled cup form, and so far they stand up well to the worst heat of summer. Most references tell me that the bush will grow 4-5 feet in diameter and the mildly rugose foliage tells me that it will be blackspot free here. It certainly has been so far, and it survived winter unprotected and cane-hardy.
The nicest thing about 'Moore's Striped Rugosa' is that it is a welcome change from the strong Rugosa genes of mauve-rose-purplish roses and single or semi-double blooms. I think this one will be quite a show piece when it reaches it's mature size. Does anyone know if it sets hips? Oh, that's probably too much to ask for, isn't it? No rose is perfect.
Sunday, July 21, 2013
Witches' Broom Arrives
The first words in my mind, about three weeks ago, as I discovered the potential disaster pictured to the right, was a horrible parody of Draco Malfoy in the first Harry Potter movie: "It's true then. Rose Rosette Disease has come to Hogwarts." Read that statement with a really exaggerated English accent and you'll know how it sounded in my mind. Crazy, I know, but somehow I must have neurons cross-firing between "witches' broom" and my mental images of the magical world of Hogwarts to make that connection. And, yes, I'm a fan of the Harry Potter series, but, no, I haven't taken to calling my garden "Hogwarts." I don't have a name for my garden. Come to think of it, "Hogwarts" might be as good as any, but I'm guessing that Mrs. ProfessorRoush won't see the humor in it.
I digress, however, as I try to avoid the awkward subject at hand. Although I'm not entirely 100% positive, I highly suspect that the misshapen foliage and canes show above are Rose Rosette Disease on my 'Golden Princess' rose. I suppose there is always some faint hope that this was damage from herbicide drift, but that multi-prickled cane appearance and warped leaves are pretty damning evidence to the contrary. The canes on this rose should look like the photo at the left, a more normal area of the bush.
Either because of inborn psychology, or due to my veterinary medical training, I'm not one to wait around and ignore a potentially garden-fatal cancer. I'm not Scarlett O'Hara in my garden, thinking I can worry about this tomorrow. In my reading on Rose Rosette Disease, I know that immediate action is necessary to prevent spread to other roses. Since I grow over 200 other roses, an epidemic of RRD is to dreadful to contemplate, a fear which also helped me take decisive action.
I immediately initiated the "one strike and you are out" philosophy used by other RRD victims. I have chopped out every cane (yes, with an axe!) that appeared to have any disease and I included the roots of those canes, resulting in the small and normal- appearing remnant displayed to the right. This rose has one chance, a chance possible only because it is an own root rose and I could divide it without splitting a bud union. If it shows me any sign of RRD in the near future, then this remainder gets shovel-pruned immediately, day or night, rain or heat. I know there is no wild multiflora rose within over 0.5 miles, so I don't know how it arrived here except in the Kansas wind, but I'm not going to baby a diseased rose in my garden.
In the interests of rose-related education, if you've never seen RRD, take a good look at that top photo. Symptoms of RRD include excessive thorniness, leaf malformation, bright red leaf and stem pigmentation, enlarged cane diameter or elongated shoots, and "witches' broom", the latter characterized by a dense mass of leaves and stems growing from a single point. The causal agent of RRD has recently been proven to be a negative-sense RNA virus in the genus Emaravirus (Laney AG, et al, J Gen Virology 2011:92:1727-1732), that is spread by the Rose Leaf Curl Mite (Phyllocoptes fructiplilus) mite.
One deformed leaf, and 'Golden Princess' is no more. At least I've got another, ordered last Winter by mistake...or was it by fortuitous clairvoyant foresight?
I digress, however, as I try to avoid the awkward subject at hand. Although I'm not entirely 100% positive, I highly suspect that the misshapen foliage and canes show above are Rose Rosette Disease on my 'Golden Princess' rose. I suppose there is always some faint hope that this was damage from herbicide drift, but that multi-prickled cane appearance and warped leaves are pretty damning evidence to the contrary. The canes on this rose should look like the photo at the left, a more normal area of the bush.
Either because of inborn psychology, or due to my veterinary medical training, I'm not one to wait around and ignore a potentially garden-fatal cancer. I'm not Scarlett O'Hara in my garden, thinking I can worry about this tomorrow. In my reading on Rose Rosette Disease, I know that immediate action is necessary to prevent spread to other roses. Since I grow over 200 other roses, an epidemic of RRD is to dreadful to contemplate, a fear which also helped me take decisive action.
I immediately initiated the "one strike and you are out" philosophy used by other RRD victims. I have chopped out every cane (yes, with an axe!) that appeared to have any disease and I included the roots of those canes, resulting in the small and normal- appearing remnant displayed to the right. This rose has one chance, a chance possible only because it is an own root rose and I could divide it without splitting a bud union. If it shows me any sign of RRD in the near future, then this remainder gets shovel-pruned immediately, day or night, rain or heat. I know there is no wild multiflora rose within over 0.5 miles, so I don't know how it arrived here except in the Kansas wind, but I'm not going to baby a diseased rose in my garden.
In the interests of rose-related education, if you've never seen RRD, take a good look at that top photo. Symptoms of RRD include excessive thorniness, leaf malformation, bright red leaf and stem pigmentation, enlarged cane diameter or elongated shoots, and "witches' broom", the latter characterized by a dense mass of leaves and stems growing from a single point. The causal agent of RRD has recently been proven to be a negative-sense RNA virus in the genus Emaravirus (Laney AG, et al, J Gen Virology 2011:92:1727-1732), that is spread by the Rose Leaf Curl Mite (Phyllocoptes fructiplilus) mite.
One deformed leaf, and 'Golden Princess' is no more. At least I've got another, ordered last Winter by mistake...or was it by fortuitous clairvoyant foresight?
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