Post a reply

Image
Mar 11, 2014 7:59 PM CST
Name: Lyn
Weaverville, California (Zone 8a)
Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Garden Sages Garden Ideas: Level 1
JulieB said:Thank you, Toni! It's a lovely little miniature w a lovely lavender shade & a big rose smell. I thought it a Jennifer but I'm not sure. But she is a beauty!


Julie ...

How big is the plant ? and how large is the bloom ? Is it fragrant ?

At first glance, it looks a lot like Dee Bennett's rose 'Sweet Arlene'.

Two other possible IDs are Dee Bennett's 'Violet Mist' and Ralph Moore's 'Vi's Violet'.

Smiles,
Lyn
I'd rather weed than dust ... the weeds stay gone longer.
Image
Mar 11, 2014 9:04 PM CST
Name: Julie
La Crescenta, CA (Zone 10a)
Cactus and Succulents Tomato Heads Roses Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Moon Gardener Garden Photography
Bookworm Butterflies Hummingbirder Dog Lover Cat Lover Container Gardener
It's a fairly large mini. Here's what the first bud looked like. It's nearly silver! The bloom is mostly white w a hint of mauve. Very fragrant.

I agree that it looks like a 'Winter Magic,' but I didn't plant one. And I'd love an Arlene but I didn't plant one of them either.

Roses here all thinking it's spring!

Thumb of 2014-03-12/JulieB/3f108c
"Coffee. Garden. Coffee. Does a good morning need anything else?"
~Betsy CaƱas Garmon
https://www.ButcherShop-NoBone...
Image
Mar 11, 2014 9:25 PM CST
Moderator
Name: Zuzu
Northern California (Zone 9a)
Region: Ukraine Charter ATP Member Region: California Cat Lover Roses Clematis
Irises Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Plant Identifier Garden Sages Plant Database Moderator Garden Ideas: Master Level
Julie, maybe you were right and it is Jennifer. It has a strong scent and it's described as a pink blend, but I've seen photos where the pink looks more lavender.

Rose (Rosa 'Jennifer')
Image
Mar 14, 2014 1:12 PM CST
Name: Rita
North Shore, Long Island, NY
Zone 6B
Charter ATP Member Seed Starter Tomato Heads I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Vegetable Grower Lover of wildlife (Raccoon badge)
Birds Garden Ideas: Master Level Butterflies Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Roses Photo Contest Winner: 2016
Happy cause I got a nice picture of Lily.
Thumb of 2014-03-14/Newyorkrita/952e34

Also changed my Avatar to one of Lily chewing on a Bully Stick.

More lily pics-

Thumb of 2014-03-14/Newyorkrita/a6a8cb
Image
Mar 14, 2014 1:52 PM CST
Moderator
Name: Zuzu
Northern California (Zone 9a)
Region: Ukraine Charter ATP Member Region: California Cat Lover Roses Clematis
Irises Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Plant Identifier Garden Sages Plant Database Moderator Garden Ideas: Master Level
Lily's precious. The bully stick in your avatar looks like a cigar and reminds me of this postcard that's hanging on my refrigerator. My neighbors gave it to me because it looks like something that could be happening on my back porch.

Thumb of 2014-03-14/zuzu/842a86
Image
Mar 14, 2014 2:09 PM CST
Name: Rita
North Shore, Long Island, NY
Zone 6B
Charter ATP Member Seed Starter Tomato Heads I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Vegetable Grower Lover of wildlife (Raccoon badge)
Birds Garden Ideas: Master Level Butterflies Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Roses Photo Contest Winner: 2016
Zuzu! That picture is hilarious.

Lily loves to carry her Bully Sticks around the house. I had just given her a new one and she took it up to the couch to start to chew.
Avatar for porkpal
Mar 14, 2014 2:28 PM CST
Name: Porkpal
Richmond, TX (Zone 9a)
Cat Lover Charter ATP Member Keeper of Poultry I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Dog Lover Keeps Horses
Roses Plant Identifier Farmer Raises cows Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Garden Ideas: Level 2
Lily is very photogenic!
Image
Mar 15, 2014 2:06 PM CST
Moderator
Name: Suzanne/Sue
Sebastopol, CA (Zone 9a)
Sunset Zone 15
Plant Database Moderator Region: California Cottage Gardener Garden Photography Roses Clematis
Daylilies Houseplants Foliage Fan Birds Butterflies Bee Lover
My Golden Celebration started blooming



as well as Joseph's Coat


Irish Hope's first dew covered bud


All the roses are full and lush with new bronze growth
Thumb of 2014-03-15/Calif_Sue/24c8b4

The ladybugs are out in full force, this one is spotless but has cool face markings
Thumb of 2014-03-15/Calif_Sue/7a3971
My gardening Blog!
Handmade quilts, new & vintage fabrics in my Etsy store. Summer Song Cottage
Instagram Sewing posts
Image
Mar 15, 2014 2:12 PM CST
Name: Rita
North Shore, Long Island, NY
Zone 6B
Charter ATP Member Seed Starter Tomato Heads I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Vegetable Grower Lover of wildlife (Raccoon badge)
Birds Garden Ideas: Master Level Butterflies Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Roses Photo Contest Winner: 2016
Beautiful Sue. Here I am still at the early spring pruning stages. But at least my spring bulbs (of which I planted thousands of last fall) are starting to pop up all over the place.
Image
Mar 15, 2014 6:22 PM CST
Name: Cindi
Wichita, Kansas (Zone 7a)
Charter ATP Member Beekeeper Garden Ideas: Master Level Roses Ponds Permaculture
Peonies Lilies Irises Dog Lover Daylilies Celebrating Gardening: 2015
Today was just classic Kansas weather. This morning was a beautiful spring day, so inviting that I left 2 coffee cups out in the garden. Our garden show is this weekend, and I just never ever miss it. I chose to stay home and putter in the garden because it was so balmy outside. Then I realized my black pants felt too hot, and shorts were called for. Many years, we skip spring and go right to summer, so I sighed and found some shorts.
While pulling mulch back from roses, checking for signs of life, I notice that the ground is dry. Time to drag hoses, I guess! I start to unwind a few miles of drip line and see that the sky is darkening and the wind is picking up. Hmmm. Maybe just the action of unrolling hoses is enough to bring on rain? Could I be that lucky? Usually it doesn't rain until after I water for 3 hours and wash the car. Sure enough, i hear thunder, and the lightning brings me indoors.
Next thing I know, it's hailing! Little tiny bits of hail, not enough to do damage, but it is hail. I check the weather forecast and see we are expecting SNOW tonight, so I bring in the California roses that I had sunning outdoors.
Yikes!
What do I do with the 50 kajillion bags of plants I have sitting on the lawn? Guess I didn't tell that story here yet. We discovered we had tree roots in the sewer line, and had to dig out the old line and totally replace 80 feet of pipe. The previous owner decided to save $30 and put in a cheaper kind of pipe, so I had to dig out every rosebush, shrub, bulb, iris, daylily, hosta and mum that was in the beds on the east side of the house. Grrrrrrrr. My husband did the rest of the excavation with the backhoe and he was very careful to look for more plant roots. Most plants are still dormant, so it was kind of hard to see all the roots in among the leaves and mulch.
Some of the plants went directly into the garage, but some have been sitting in clumps on the lawn. I think I had 10 roses in that area, and a huge Incrediball Hydrangea.
So now those bags are even heavier since the clumps are mud. I think I'm going to divide all the clumps of daylilies, siberian iris, japanese iris and mums that I took out. There were several big clumps of lilium that will need a new home too. There's a big open sunny area I can use, but it's going to look like a bag of jelly beans until everything blooms and gets a new label. I was rushing so fast to get stuff out that I didn't even sort like items in the same bags. At this time of year, I couldn't tell you what all is in that flower bed! If I saw a root, I saved it. The clematis I dug out had roots 2 feet long!
Now the lightning is closer, so I need to unplug for a while. Ha! That will make the grass green up, for sure!
Guess the next round will be thunder snow. Crazy stuff!
Blinking Rolling my eyes.
Remember that children, marriages, and flower gardens reflect the kind of care they get.
H. Jackson Brown, Jr.
Image
Mar 15, 2014 6:24 PM CST
Name: Rita
North Shore, Long Island, NY
Zone 6B
Charter ATP Member Seed Starter Tomato Heads I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Vegetable Grower Lover of wildlife (Raccoon badge)
Birds Garden Ideas: Master Level Butterflies Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Roses Photo Contest Winner: 2016
What a day, Cindi.

Hey, monday is St Paddys day. I have the traditional corned beef and cabbage.
Image
Mar 15, 2014 6:25 PM CST
Moderator
Name: Zuzu
Northern California (Zone 9a)
Region: Ukraine Charter ATP Member Region: California Cat Lover Roses Clematis
Irises Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Plant Identifier Garden Sages Plant Database Moderator Garden Ideas: Master Level
I'll have the traditional corned beef and cold beer. I don't like cabbage. Whistling
Image
Mar 15, 2014 6:32 PM CST
Name: Rita
North Shore, Long Island, NY
Zone 6B
Charter ATP Member Seed Starter Tomato Heads I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Vegetable Grower Lover of wildlife (Raccoon badge)
Birds Garden Ideas: Master Level Butterflies Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Roses Photo Contest Winner: 2016
Well, I actually bought Brussels sprouts. I figure they are close enough to cabbage. Plus I really love the taste of them. I simply add them to the pot I cooked the corned beef in when it is near done.
Image
Mar 15, 2014 6:48 PM CST
Name: Gloria Levely
Sanford Mi. (Zone 5b)
Charter ATP Member I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Region: United States of America Roses Peonies Region: Michigan
Lilies Irises Hostas Dog Lover Daylilies Clematis
what a mess Cindi !!!! Blinking Blinking shorts sound good though ! we still have snow and ice every where but it is sort of melting Hurray! right now theres a BIG full moon shinning on the river looks like a spot light out there
Image
Mar 15, 2014 8:14 PM CST
Name: Lyn
Weaverville, California (Zone 8a)
Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Garden Sages Garden Ideas: Level 1
@CindiKS, Cindi

>>>> What do I do with the 50 kajillion bags of plants I have sitting on the lawn?

This suggestion may get to you too late to do anything right now, but you may experience more cold weather before you all of those plants back into the ground, so it may help.

The answer to your question is to make BIG clusters of the plants. Bag some of your mulch to put in the gaps between the plants and to tie around the cluster. It is harder to freeze a large mass than a smaller one.

I have had to change from warm clothing to cooler clothing and back to warmer clothing all this week because the swing between our night temps and day temps has been 30 to 40 degrees. It's cold at night and in the morning, but warms up for several hours during the day. I am still sleeping under my winter blankies .... Big Grin

Smiles,
Lyn
I'd rather weed than dust ... the weeds stay gone longer.
Image
Mar 16, 2014 12:40 PM CST
Name: Cindi
Wichita, Kansas (Zone 7a)
Charter ATP Member Beekeeper Garden Ideas: Master Level Roses Ponds Permaculture
Peonies Lilies Irises Dog Lover Daylilies Celebrating Gardening: 2015
Lyn,
You are right about huddling the bags together for warmth. I did huddle them, but cold wasn't my concern at that time. I was trying to keep them from blowing away in our 40 mph wind! I should have dumped mulch on the pile of bags like you suggested. We are up to 36 degrees now, so the biggest danger is over.
Did I mention we had a grass fire? A total of 15 acres burned across the street from me. My husband was able to douse the edge by my neighbor's house using his quad and my big watering tank. Five firetrucks came a few minutes later and contained the rest. One neighbor has a big building with race cars and the fire went all around the building but the only loss other than the grass was a wood fence. The grass will all grow back since it's buffalo and bluestem, but 2 neighbors will be replacing trees. I'm sure glad it didn't spread to the cotton field behind our neighborhood.
I worry sometimes about my wood mulch becoming a fire hazard. The house is thick limestone and brick, so that's not such a worry, but with this wind and the dry conditions, fire spreads super fast! The cedar trees are almost as bad as the eucalyptus trees in California--super hot torches!
Today I'm supposed to be pruning all the roses at my mother in law's house so we can get the place ready for sale. We've spent weeks cleaning it out and fixing it up. I've never understood why people will fix up a house or a car to sell it, but not while they are using it themselves. I wish we had worked this hard while my in laws were alive so they could have enjoyed a modernized home. I guess I never really saw how overgrown her roses and shrubs were; and maybe she wasn't a serious gardener. My sisters in law ordered a rose from J & P every year for many many years, but now most are Dr. Huey. I would like to find the notebook where my MIL kept track of what she planted and where. We could dig them and bring them to my place if I wanted.
We also brought home dozens of crocheted and quilted blankets. Our nights are cold enough for the heavy blankets and footie pajamas, so we're trying out various quilts. I wish i had enough wall space to display some of them. My MIL was an artist, and one room had literally hundreds of canvases with landscapes. What do I do with all these? Turn the garage into a gallery? Paint over them? My husband and youngest daughter are skilled painters, maybe they'll re-use them?
Some are from her mother and grandmother, so they are old. Guess that artistic gene is pretty persistent!
Remember that children, marriages, and flower gardens reflect the kind of care they get.
H. Jackson Brown, Jr.
Image
Mar 16, 2014 3:27 PM CST
Name: Lyn
Weaverville, California (Zone 8a)
Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Garden Sages Garden Ideas: Level 1
Cindo ...

Yes, I remember your writing about the winds a while back ...or I think it was you ... Smiling

I moved up here from San Diego and had never experienced a winter in the mountains. I was gifted with over 100 roses which I potted up because I was too busy that year handling the deferred maintenance that came with the house.

Yeah, I was worried about the cold. That's when I came up with the idea of big clusters. I tied the bags of mulch around the clusters with twine. It was cheap and it worked ... Big Grin

It turns out that it is the heat of summer that causes more plant stress than the cold in my zone. However, I still worry about plants in containers. I haven't lost any plants, but I just can't seem to convince myself not to worry about them.

You don't need to worry about your wood mulch being a fire hazard, but may want to take a look at ladder fuels. A few years ago, I got all of my neighbors together and we had a CalFire crew come out and do fuel reduction work on all of our properties. I asked one of the crew members about my mulch and that is when he explained what firefighters call "The rule of four." To summarize, if the fuel for the fire is two feet tall, the flames would be eight feet tall. He told me that my mulch was two inches, so the flames from the mulch would be eight inches ... easily managed.

There are a lot of articles about firescaping on the Internet and you can learn more by visiting those sites. The best defense for any structure is the correct selection of foundation plantings and trees. I don't need to worry about my maple tree because it is a hardwood tree and those take a long time to catch fire. I do have to make sure it is properly limbed, which is true for all of the trees up here because we live in a wildfire area.

I am going to have to prune back the junipers on my slope because they are not fire safe. If they caught fire, they would not cause a problem for my home as fire travels up hill and my house is down below the slope, but would be more of a hazard to the neighbor who lives above me. I am not looking forward to that task, but it has to be done. If they still have the fuel reduction program, I might be able to get the work done for me for free. I'll be looking into it this week.

Smiles,
Lyn
I'd rather weed than dust ... the weeds stay gone longer.
Image
Mar 16, 2014 3:53 PM CST
Moderator
Name: Suzanne/Sue
Sebastopol, CA (Zone 9a)
Sunset Zone 15
Plant Database Moderator Region: California Cottage Gardener Garden Photography Roses Clematis
Daylilies Houseplants Foliage Fan Birds Butterflies Bee Lover
New Whitinger addition is here!
The thread "Brand new Whitinger!" in Site Talk forum
My gardening Blog!
Handmade quilts, new & vintage fabrics in my Etsy store. Summer Song Cottage
Instagram Sewing posts
Image
Mar 17, 2014 2:44 PM CST
Name: Rita
North Shore, Long Island, NY
Zone 6B
Charter ATP Member Seed Starter Tomato Heads I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Vegetable Grower Lover of wildlife (Raccoon badge)
Birds Garden Ideas: Master Level Butterflies Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Roses Photo Contest Winner: 2016
Crocus are starting to bloom around here.
Thumb of 2014-03-17/Newyorkrita/35d18f
Snowbunting


Gypsey Girl

Lily learned to get up on the radiator cover here in my home office!
Thumb of 2014-03-17/Newyorkrita/0e2099
Image
Mar 21, 2014 10:37 AM CST
Name: Rita
North Shore, Long Island, NY
Zone 6B
Charter ATP Member Seed Starter Tomato Heads I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Vegetable Grower Lover of wildlife (Raccoon badge)
Birds Garden Ideas: Master Level Butterflies Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Roses Photo Contest Winner: 2016
Lily is totally nuts today. Been running around the house at full speed and also getting into everything she should not be into!
Thumb of 2014-03-21/Newyorkrita/c323ae
Thumb of 2014-03-21/Newyorkrita/6ec1ab

I do have some crocus blooming.
Thumb of 2014-03-21/Newyorkrita/7f73c8
Thumb of 2014-03-21/Newyorkrita/c168b0

Only the members of the Members group may reply to this thread.
  • Started by: zuzu
  • Replies: 99, views: 4,071
Member Login:

( No account? Join now! )

Today's site banner is by RootedInDirt and is called "Botanical Gardens"

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.