Friends, you would think that an old gardener could catch a break. Out here on the Kansas Prairie, I garden in defiance of scorching sun, bitter blizzards, desiccating droughts, gale-force winds, rocky soil, and even the occasional prairie fire. Is it too much to ask if the gardener's wife could cut him a little slack?
I took the picture above yesterday morning when the ground was still wet with dew and I sent it to Mrs. ProfessorRoush after telling her that I thought I'd captured a photo of a rose with exquisite coloring. After receiving it on her iPhone, sitting in an adjacent room to where I was engaged on the computer, I heard her immediately exclaim "no way!". And she then proceeded to accuse me of faking the coloration by photoshopping it. And wanted to know where it was in the garden (even though she passes by it every day).
Mrs. ProfessorRoush is a wonderful wife and human being, but I was deeply hurt that she could suggest I would resort to falsifying a photo to deceive her. I'm certainly not above cropping out a decaying bloom from the corner of a picture, nor occasionally playing with the brightness/darkness setting of a photo, but I would never, and probably could never, fake a picture like this one. I don't even own Photoshop. I do my cropping and compressing on the Microsoft Picture Manager that comes with the computer. If I had really faked this photo, I'd have certainly smudged out the insect bites on a couple of the petals.
The photo is, of course, of Griffith Buck's 'Distant Drums' rose, a rose that I've written about before and one that is admittedly not one of my favorites. The blooms of this rose always have a unique coloration, but this trio went above and beyond their usual palette. Since it just gave me a chance to astonish Mrs. ProfessorRoush, I may have to raise my personal ranking of 'Distant Drums'. It's not often that I can gain a little respect at home, even if I have to loudly and fervently assert my innocence to get it.
I liked the photo so much, in fact, that I just made it my "masthead" for the blog. What do you think of it?
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Monday, June 2, 2014
Sunday, June 1, 2014
Chasing the Rose
From Carol, at May Dreams Gardens, I learned of a new and very readable book about a "found" rose and I put it on my birthday list to purchase and read. Of the three books I purchased as a self-gift for my now past birthday, I chose to read Chasing the Rose: An Adventure in the Venetian Countryside first. Chasing the Rose is by Andrea di Robilant and it has kept me captivated for several nights this week.
The book is a journey of the search for the identity of a rose, known as 'Rosa Moceniga', that was found on the author's ancestral home of Alvisopoli, Italy (a city named for its founder, the author's great-great-great-great grandfather, Alvise Mocenigo). It's a journey that covers vast spaces, as di Robilant searches for clues about its origins in several countries and gardens, and also covers vast time periods, for it is, in part, a historical essay on his great-great-great-great grandmother Lucia's relationship with the Empress Josephine of Malmaison and a history of the "China" roses.
The story is quite entertaining regarding the rose and, because of the historical info, educational at the same time. It was also eye-opening for me, because the author interacts several times with Professor Stefano Mancuso of the University of Florence. Professor Mancuso is one of the pioneers in the field of plant neurobiology, a field that views plants less as insensate organisms battered at the whims of man and nature, but as information-processing organisms with communication between all parts of the plant and responses to the environment. He even gave an interesting TED lecture in 2010. There is even a Society for Plant Neurobiology, which you may belong to for the annual membership of $60, and a Journal of Plant Signaling and Behavior that publishes manuscripts about plant responses to environmental stimuli.
Heck, I thought we'd left all that behind in the 1970's after the publication of SuperNature, a bestseller about ESP and plants and other mystic crap that captivated me in my teens. It has since been discredited, but the book made a wave among the wannabe hippies with its reports that a razor blade left in the pyramid of Cheops will magically become sharp again and that plants can sense the death of nearby snails, among other made up or poorly investigated crap. Now here the idea is back, complete with all the controversy. Wikipedia has even stepped into the fray, moving an entry on "plant neurobiology" in 2012 into an entry regarding "plant perception."
I don't know where you stand on the subject, and keep in mind that there have been no discoveries of neurons or a brain in plants, but in the future, you might be a little nervous about missing a watering of your potted plants. You never know when they might retaliate by psychically strangulating us in our sleep.
The book is a journey of the search for the identity of a rose, known as 'Rosa Moceniga', that was found on the author's ancestral home of Alvisopoli, Italy (a city named for its founder, the author's great-great-great-great grandfather, Alvise Mocenigo). It's a journey that covers vast spaces, as di Robilant searches for clues about its origins in several countries and gardens, and also covers vast time periods, for it is, in part, a historical essay on his great-great-great-great grandmother Lucia's relationship with the Empress Josephine of Malmaison and a history of the "China" roses.
The story is quite entertaining regarding the rose and, because of the historical info, educational at the same time. It was also eye-opening for me, because the author interacts several times with Professor Stefano Mancuso of the University of Florence. Professor Mancuso is one of the pioneers in the field of plant neurobiology, a field that views plants less as insensate organisms battered at the whims of man and nature, but as information-processing organisms with communication between all parts of the plant and responses to the environment. He even gave an interesting TED lecture in 2010. There is even a Society for Plant Neurobiology, which you may belong to for the annual membership of $60, and a Journal of Plant Signaling and Behavior that publishes manuscripts about plant responses to environmental stimuli.
Heck, I thought we'd left all that behind in the 1970's after the publication of SuperNature, a bestseller about ESP and plants and other mystic crap that captivated me in my teens. It has since been discredited, but the book made a wave among the wannabe hippies with its reports that a razor blade left in the pyramid of Cheops will magically become sharp again and that plants can sense the death of nearby snails, among other made up or poorly investigated crap. Now here the idea is back, complete with all the controversy. Wikipedia has even stepped into the fray, moving an entry on "plant neurobiology" in 2012 into an entry regarding "plant perception."
I don't know where you stand on the subject, and keep in mind that there have been no discoveries of neurons or a brain in plants, but in the future, you might be a little nervous about missing a watering of your potted plants. You never know when they might retaliate by psychically strangulating us in our sleep.
Friday, May 30, 2014
Beastly Bindweed
If you were ever skeptical of stories that report that bindweed can come up from beneath asphalt, now is the time to lower your cynicism and face the triumphant floral villain. A few weeks back, the gravel road in front of our house was paved and it is now full of green-bubbling volcanoes of exuberant triangular leaves. Although my neighbor questioned the policy prior to paving, the paving company and township said that pre-treating the road base with herbicide was not necessary. They were wrong. That root system can go down to over 10 feet deep and if the entire root isn't removed, it regenerates from any remaining rhizomes. To top it off, seeds remain viable for up to 50 years in the soil! Because of the lack of foresight and the tight pockets of the local government, we may now be in for a lifetime of erupting asphalt on our road.
Bindweed, or Convolvulus arvensis, which is the likely species in this area, grows throughout Kansas, but was native to Eurasia, carried across the Atlantic ocean and west across the prairies by its own version of manifest destiny. Once cultivated as an ornamental and a medicinal herb, it is now a noxious weed in many states and is nearly impossible to eradicate without toxic chemicals. The plant at the bottom right has been sprayed twice with Roundup and still continues to grow. We should consider adding nuclear waste to the next spray. Or we'll have to try flamethrowers or perhaps raw sulfuric acid. And what do we do about the yet-unerupted masses hiding below the surface like the one to the left? How do I kill the seedlings before they destroy the road?
I wish my roses had that excess of vigor. Or perhaps I don't, because roses that came up through asphalt AND had thorns would be pretty rough on our tires. Anyway, what's next to test my tolerance? Kudzu?
Bindweed, or Convolvulus arvensis, which is the likely species in this area, grows throughout Kansas, but was native to Eurasia, carried across the Atlantic ocean and west across the prairies by its own version of manifest destiny. Once cultivated as an ornamental and a medicinal herb, it is now a noxious weed in many states and is nearly impossible to eradicate without toxic chemicals. The plant at the bottom right has been sprayed twice with Roundup and still continues to grow. We should consider adding nuclear waste to the next spray. Or we'll have to try flamethrowers or perhaps raw sulfuric acid. And what do we do about the yet-unerupted masses hiding below the surface like the one to the left? How do I kill the seedlings before they destroy the road?
Up till now, I've controlled its spread into our yard, and I've fought it in only one of my garden beds (one with imported soil), but it seems to really like the poor clay base of our road. Or at least the seeds are feeling cramped and trying to find some sunshine. The patience and strength of those tiny tendrils is mind boggling.
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
Honorine de Brabant
In the near future, I should post a list of roses that survived our harsh -10ºF winter and snows in unscathed fashion, but right now, I'd like to spotlight a rose that surprised me in that regard. 'Honorine de Brabant' is beginning her second full season in my garden and her 2.5 foot tall canes had absolutely no tip dieback or damage this winter.
I previously grew 'Honorine de Brabant' near my back patio, in poorer and more clay-ish soil, and she struggled and died there even though I pampered her as much as possible. I repurchased and replanted her as a rooted band into a mixed border, in fact into a hole dug in the middle of a large clump of Miscanthus sp. grass that was too big to move and had been previously killed with Roundup. Here, with 'Charlotte Brownell' and 'Country Dancer' to gossip with, HDB has come into her own.
'Honorine de Brabant' is reported to be a "discovered" Bourbon, by Tanne of France in 1916. The fat buds seem to promise a rose full of petals but her dainty blooms are merely double and not so full of petals as many Old Garden Roses. She is, however moderately fragrant, and she remains cupped and displays ample golden stamens around her pistil, a lady of some refinement. The petals seem fragile and curl at the tips, but they stand up well to heat and wind. I saw a few blooms from her last year when she was still small, but her rebloom is slow and stingy in my experience here and others report the same thing on GardenWeb.com. She does have a good last Fall flush, however. She is a healthy bush, without a trace of blackspot, and I always welcome the unique blooms of a striped rose. I expect Honorine to top five feet tall and I hope she will retain that vase-like shape seen below on to maturity. Did I mention that she is one of the minority of roses in my garden this year that had no winter damage?
I love striped roses so much, in fact, that last night I committed a rose faux pas at the "two-for-ten-dollar" sale at Home Depot. On that particular sale rack, there were a number of wretched potted roses labeled as "Love", but the only two that were blooming had striped blooms, one identical to 'Honorine de Brabant', the other darker magenta stripes and more fully double like 'Variegata di Bologna'. Both were strongly fragrant and I suspect some commercial grower in Oklahoma was getting rid of excess stock by labeling it with a name more recognized by the general public. I bought and planted both, although they are grafted roses, so I can compare them to my own-root specimens of those varieties. Not very exciting as activities go, but it keeps me off the streets.
I previously grew 'Honorine de Brabant' near my back patio, in poorer and more clay-ish soil, and she struggled and died there even though I pampered her as much as possible. I repurchased and replanted her as a rooted band into a mixed border, in fact into a hole dug in the middle of a large clump of Miscanthus sp. grass that was too big to move and had been previously killed with Roundup. Here, with 'Charlotte Brownell' and 'Country Dancer' to gossip with, HDB has come into her own.
'Honorine de Brabant' is reported to be a "discovered" Bourbon, by Tanne of France in 1916. The fat buds seem to promise a rose full of petals but her dainty blooms are merely double and not so full of petals as many Old Garden Roses. She is, however moderately fragrant, and she remains cupped and displays ample golden stamens around her pistil, a lady of some refinement. The petals seem fragile and curl at the tips, but they stand up well to heat and wind. I saw a few blooms from her last year when she was still small, but her rebloom is slow and stingy in my experience here and others report the same thing on GardenWeb.com. She does have a good last Fall flush, however. She is a healthy bush, without a trace of blackspot, and I always welcome the unique blooms of a striped rose. I expect Honorine to top five feet tall and I hope she will retain that vase-like shape seen below on to maturity. Did I mention that she is one of the minority of roses in my garden this year that had no winter damage?
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