HelpMeFind Roses, Clematis and Peonies
Roses, Clematis and Peonies
and everything gardening related.
DescriptionPhotosLineageAwardsReferencesMember RatingsMember CommentsMember JournalsCuttingsGardensBuy From 
'Red Fairy' rose Reviews & Comments
Discussion id : 159-118
most recent 19 DEC HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 19 DEC by A Rose Man
Said to be diploid in the paper 'Genotyping-by-sequencing application on diploid rose and a resulting high-density SNP-based consensus map'
REPLY
Discussion id : 56-624
most recent 14 AUG 11 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 12 AUG 11 by Simon Voorwinde
The parentage of 'Red Fairy' is listed as 'Simon Robinson' x 'Simon Robinson' by Weeks roses.

It says at the bottom of the description page: "Weeks Roses says the parentage is 'Simon Robinson' x 'Simon Robinson', other sources say otherwise, see References"

In the references it says: "MORedfar Polyantha, deep pink to red, 1995; (Red Fairy); 'Simon Robinson' x Unknown; Moore, Ralph S. Description."

Mr Moore is the breeder... why is Weeks Roses description being taken over the breeder's? Is there a story behind this?

Reason I ask is that 'Simon Robinson' is single. Double flowers are dominant over single flowers (pers. comm. David Zlesak, Aug 23, 2007) so it would stand to reason that 'Simon Robinson' does not even posses genes capable of making double flowers (single can't 'carry' double'), and it is listed as SR x SR making 'Red Fairy' impossible by normal means (i.e. not considering mutations etc), from this cross.
REPLY
Reply #1 of 9 posted 12 AUG 11 by HMF Admin
Hopefully we can get Kim Rupert and/or Paul Barden to weigh in on this.
REPLY
Reply #2 of 9 posted 12 AUG 11 by Robert Neil Rippetoe
I've long said the pollen parent is most likely an unknown polyantha. Open pollination at Sequoia could have been almost anything.
REPLY
Reply #3 of 9 posted 13 AUG 11 by Kim Rupert
I'd have to agree with Robert. The pollen parent could have been just about anything, and Mr. Moore's memory for such details was quite suspect in later years.
REPLY
Reply #4 of 9 posted 13 AUG 11 by RoseBlush
Simon......

I am still very new regarding reading and understanding linage trees, but your comment "Double flowers are dominant over single flowers (pers. comm. David Zlesak, Aug 23, 2007) so it would stand to reason that 'Simon Robinson' does not even posses genes capable of making double flowers (single can't 'carry' double')," has made me question a few things... anyone pleae jump in if I am a bit mixed up ... I don't think you can make such a blanket rule as suggested above when there are are roses in it's linage, through 'New Penny', that include semi-double, double and full petalage in their bloom form. The genes are there in the linage.

I don't deny that Mr. Moore allowed a patent using a self cross for the lineage information and registered the rose saying the pollen parent was unknown, so the actual parentage is in doubt. Also, many of the roses he bred sat on the bench for years before introduction to the market. There is a very good chance some records were lost due to floods that were once quite common in the Valley causing the loss of both plants and records, employee error or a faulty memory.

Mr. Moore created many break through roses by ingnoring the rules of what roses can or cannot produce given what was known by "science" during his time by always asking himself, "What if...."

What I am questioning is the statement, 'Simon Robinson' does not even posses genes capable of making double flowers (single can't carry double)". Over a very long life of rose breeding, even Mr. Moore said that roses don't alway follow the "rules". I think he sometimes added, "that's because they can't read".

If I am missing something, which is very possible because I very much the novice here, please let me know what I missed.

Smiles,
Lyn
REPLY
Reply #5 of 9 posted 14 AUG 11 by Robert Neil Rippetoe
Lyn, your right. Double flowered cultivars can certainly come from self pollination of single flowered cultivars. Especially those with doubles in their recent past.

In this case I've grow 'Simon Robinson' and used it in hybridizing to see what it produces. It's enough different enough from 'Red Fairy' that I would question the self pollination.theory.

Bees and wind can do a surprisingly good job of moving pollen around.
REPLY
Reply #6 of 9 posted 14 AUG 11 by RoseBlush
Thanks, Robert...

I agree the parentage of Red Fairy will always be in doubt and it probably was open pollenated.

That's not what my post was about. Saying SR doesn't have the genes to produce double flowers didn't quite make sense to me and the more I thought about it, the more confused I managed to become and thought I must not be reading this right.

Smiles,
Lyn
REPLY
Reply #7 of 9 posted 14 AUG 11 by Simon Voorwinde
HI Lyn,

It IS possible to make such statements and a long story cut short... genes can be be bred OUT as easily as they can be bred IN. Mr Moore may well have ignored the rules, however, he also knew this well and understood that whilst he might ignore the conventional crossing rules, the final outcome did not... to believe otherwise would mean that genes can be accumulated indefinately over many generations and there is no difference between the genes.

The fact that 'New Penny' and other double roses are in the lineage is, to be blunt, irrelevant as are things like the fidelity of the records kept. Some things speak for themselves. If the instructions to make flowers double are not present then they won't be double and they won't carry double.

Here's what I mean... chromosomes are like filing cabinets. They posses 'drawers' along their length into which genes are placed. Chromosomes are paired and every chromosome has a copy. The copy will have exactly the same 'drawer structure' and each 'drawer' at a specific location can contain the same TYPE of gene. One chromosome contains genes from one parent and the other chromosome copy contains genes from the other parent (without taking into account crossing over etc). Each gene at each matching location on the chromosome carries out the same function but can be slightly different. For example, in humans blue eyes and brown eyes are caused by slightly different versions of the same gene and are found at the same location... and we have two copies of it... one from Mum and one from Dad.

Gregor Mendel was able to show, using pea plants, that when there were slightly different copies of the same 'factor' that one was often more likely to be expressed than the other. We now call these dominant and recessive genes. When a dominant gene is combined with a recessive gene you won't see the effects of the recessive one. Only the dominant one. There are variations to this rule but this is the way it works in its most basic interpretation. If a brown eyed gene combines with a blue eyed gene you don't see blue. You see brown. The blue gene is still there... you just can't see it. It can still be inherited and so we say it is being carried.

When sex cells like pollen and eggs are made the first thing that must happen is the total chromosome number must be halved and the two copies of each chromosome are pulled apart and one goes into one sex cell and the other into another. I am simplifying the concepts involved but this is the general outcome. In the case of the person with one brown eye gene and one blue eye gene these two will get separated and placed put into separate sex cells. The chromosomes must undergo a reduction in number by half so that on fertilisation a full set can once again be made; one from Mum and one from Dad. If the sex cells in this example were sperm then one sperm would have the blue eye gene and another would have the brown eye gene and if the blue eye gene was the lucky one that fertilised the egg then the brown eyed gene from the father is essentially removed completely from the resulting offspring and can never again pop up. The egg is made in the same way and if the egg contains a blue eye gene then the baby will have blue eyes and there is no chance that it can ever have a brown eyed child with another blue eyed person (unless some form of mutation occurs etc).

This is the same with roses. David Zlesak told, me at the date mentioned above, that double flowers are dominant to single flowers. This means that double can carry single but the reverse cannot be true and by single I am limiting the definition to ONLY 5 petaled single flowers. Single flowers that have more than 5 petals are not genetic singles. They are genetic doubles and other genes are acting on them to modify the level to which this gene is expressed to make them look 'almost single'. A genetic single cannot carry double and 'Simon Robinson' is a genetic single with 5 petals. This means it cannot carry double. I am not talking about those singles that look single but sometimes have that curly little petaloid etc.. they are double flowers with other genes reducing the expression of doubleness to such a point that they look single.

When people say things like ity must be a throw back this would be true when talking about recessive genes, but not when talking about dominant ones. Recessive genes can stay hidden for many many generations. Dominant genes are expressed if present.

'Red Fairy' is shown by Mr Moore as being 'Simon Robinson' x ?. This is because he understood this process well and he would have been acknowledging that for this seedling ('Red Fairy') to have appeared it MUST have been from some random (double) pollen from somewhere. For someone else to turn around and say it is from SR x SR is wrong genetically speaking and my question is, and was originally too, why is the word of the breeder not being taken over the word of someone else who in this case has got it wrong? I am betting what has happened is that someones else's interpretation of events was that SR x ? means self pollination, and Mr Moore has been noted as saying that in general most OP pollinations were the work of selfing. But in this case, this is not the case and the problem I have with this is that now it is recorded in the pedigree and someone else will look at this and might reasonably expect that single is dominant to double and that anything really is possible when it isn't. Breeding might seem like a random process but it isn't really. SR x SR is not the same thing as SR x ?

So this is why I am making such a sweeping statement. The way the plant looks (its phenotype) cannot tell us all the answers. Indeed it can tell us only a very small amount of information really, but there are some things that we can tell from it that can help us shape our breeding so that it is not such a random process. One of the things that HMF need to keep in mind is that the family tree function is an enormously valuable genetic resource that shows inheritence patterns to those willing to look and so the records need to be questioned in light of what we know to be true so they reflect as accurately as possible to those looking how the various features of a rose interact.

For reference, this is the list of the basic genetic inheritence in roses that David passed on back in 2007:

"Here is a partial list of the primary inheritance(s) of some of the key traits. It isn't always as simple as what is listed, so that is why I say primary. Hope it is helpful.

David

Qualitative Dominant

Black spot resistance
Double Flowers
Glossy Foliage
Male sterility
Miniature stature
Moss
Prickles
Powdery Mildew resistance

Qualitative recessive

Repeat bloom

Quantitative

Blackspot resistance
Double flowers (degree of doubleness)
Flower color- flavanoids and carotenoids
Flowering under low irradiance
Juvenile Period
Male fertility
Prickles (degree of prickles)
Winter hardiness
Flower yield "

When David says it isn't always as simple as what it seems he is saying that there are many other factors we don't know about. The ones listed above are the ones we do know about and can be readily predicted. To this list climbing might be added as a dominant feature.

Hope this helps some,

Simon
REPLY
Reply #8 of 9 posted 14 AUG 11 by RoseBlush
Hi Simon........

I learned about Mendel's work while in college in the days of my youth, which is long past, but enough to remember the basics of his theories about dominant and recessive genes, but had not remembered enough to understand that characteristics could be bred completely out and not be recesessive.

Thank you for simplifying the concepts.

It now makes sense to use the Registration for the linage information for Red Fairy rather than the Patent information. Since Q & A answers are always archived with the rose on HMF, anyone who wonders why HMF has used the Registration linage over the Patent linage can read your post and learn a bit about how breeders think when they examine the linage of a rose.

I had to do linage trees by hand before HMF developed the linage reports and truly enjoy using the reports instead of making my own.

I'll make the suggested change to the linage of the rose and make a NOTE on the rose page pointing site user to this post.

Smiles,
Lyn
REPLY
Reply #9 of 9 posted 14 AUG 11 by Robert Neil Rippetoe
'Simon Robinson' doesn't seem to breed like a true genetic single, for whatever reason.

We'd have to experiment intentionally selfing it to be sure.

I got some double seedlings out of it but I can't be sure they weren't open pollinated crosses. Foliage did seem to show more wichurana influence than exhibited in 'Red Fairy'.

'Red Fairy' seems to show multiflora influence.
REPLY
Discussion id : 48-420
most recent 25 SEP 10 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 25 SEP 10 by Unregistered Guest
Available from - filroses
www.filroses.com
REPLY
Discussion id : 11-347
most recent 4 MAR 08 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 27 FEB 06 by Unregistered Guest
Red Fairy has been a champ for me. I planted a massing of them in between my front fence and the sidewalk, and they provided an entire season of color--they never stopped blooming even in extended periods of high 90 degree heat! The blooms are not large, but they are clustered and numerous. The color varies between a deep fuschia pink and cherry red. It's a low-growing, vigorous, valiant rose that earns its keep in the garden.
REPLY
Reply #1 of 7 posted 1 MAR 06 by Kim Rupert
Yes, Red Fairy has proven itself to be one great landscaping rose! I'd seen this at Sequoia for years and was thrilled Mr. Moore finally decided to introduce it. It reminded me of a red version of The Fairy, so I began referring to it to Mr. Moore as "Red Fairy" when asking its status. It didn't take long for him, and the other folks at Sequoia to begin calling it "Red Fairy", too. Not only is it a good ground cover, it makes a beautiful standard, too!
REPLY
Reply #2 of 7 posted 2 MAR 06 by ParisRoseLady
Wow, Kim... So YOUR'E the one that started that whole name association thing between the two roses! It's funny because so often you see Red Fairy referred to as a 'sport' of The Fairy, when in fact it's a completely different rose! I have not grown either rose long enough to observe all the similairties/differences, but maybe a couple of years down the line, it would be interesting to do a compare/contrast. The first year in my garden, my massing of 24 Red Fairies was:
--Quick to bloom from a bareroot.--they practically surfaced blooming.
--An incessant bloomer, with no pauses between flushes.
--Seemingly immune to heat (I don't know about drought, because I kept my bushes well watered).
--Cheerful and valiant--Brightly colored, electric lime green foliage; it's a good-time rose!
REPLY
Reply #3 of 7 posted 2 MAR 06 by Kim Rupert
Hi, Claire. Yes, ma'am, I'm the guilty party! The rose reminded me of The Fairy, except it's cleaner and not the same color. It's a seedling from Simon Robinson, so there is no direct connection to The Fairy. Interestingly, I've encountered similar difficulties with a seedling of mine, Rayon Butterflies. Mateo's Silk Butterflies is a seedling of Mutabilis, with more lavender tones. My Mutabilis seedling is more pink, deepening with age, heat and light. Decades ago, the synthetic fiber, Rayon, was very popular for soft goods. It's main problem was, it turned pink with age. So, as a pun on Silk Butterflies, because it turns pink with age, I called mine Rayon Butterflies. So far, I've received three inquiries about my "dwarf, pink sport of Mutabilis"! LOL!

As for the color to name association, it's been used many times before. Take a look at Pink Mermaid. It has nothing to do with Mermaid, but it's a single, pink climber and reminded the namer of a pink Mermaid. I did it with my Golden Julia, the yellow sport of Julia's Rose. The rose registrations are full of such examples. I'm glad you like Mr. Moore's rose. I always have! Kim
REPLY
Reply #4 of 7 posted 4 MAR 06 by ParisRoseLady
Thanks for that background, Kim! It's always fascinating to hear the 'behind-the-scenes' info on how these roses came to be... Best Always, Claire
REPLY
Reply #5 of 7 posted 4 MAR 06 by Kim Rupert
You're welcome, Claire. It's also important to document things like this on a forum which will last. Too many historical and human interest points regarding interesting things are lost forever because there wasn't somehwere to record them. We have a tremendous resource here in Help Me Find to save some of this interesting history. Thank you for being a part of it! Kim
REPLY
Reply #6 of 7 posted 26 FEB 08 by Chris
please tell me which zone you believe it will do well in. 5, i hope. chris in ct.
REPLY
Reply #7 of 7 posted 4 MAR 08 by Unregistered Guest
Hello there... Red Fairy has been very hardy for me in Zone 5-6. I even have had some that have overwintered in large pots with only some leaves on top for protection. The ones in the ground are completely hardy in this zone. They benefit from a good hard prune in the spring in order to keep tidy (unless you like them 'wild and wooly'!), and then they get going with lots of lime green growth and those cherry red clusters that go and go for the entire season.
REPLY
© 2024 HelpMeFind.com