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'Rosa stellata subspecies mirifica W.H. Lewis' rose Reviews & Comments
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Initial post
18 JUN 15 by
Tessie
Very odd. I grow this rose and it shows up in my list of roses on HMF, but if I go to Rosa stellata mirifica's page and look under the Gardens tab, no gardens in the US are listed.
Update a few minutes later. I changed the garden location drop down menu to all countries. And sure enough my garden showed up. Then I switched location back to United States, and my garden showed up along with some others.
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#1 of 3 posted
19 JUN 15 by
Kim Rupert
Hi Tessie, good to see you back! I emailed you directly several weeks ago with photos of a rose we saw on the San Juan Bautista garden tour I think is a species hybrid. As you grow so many, I wondered if you might recognize it. I sent it to the email address linked here. Perhaps it might not have arrived? BTW, if and when your Stellata begins suckering, I would appreciate being permitted to beg one from you. Thanks! Kim
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#2 of 3 posted
20 JUN 15 by
Tessie
Hi Kim,
Ooops, I think an email from you sounds familiar, but I had some crises to deal with recently, and my email has been neglected. Sorry.
Great minds think alike. I was planning on trying to layer it in the fall, when the weather is cooler. Marissa suggested, since the plant she sent was small, that I keep it in a pot for a while. So that is what I am doing. Being in a pot does make it available for layering, once it is a teensy bit bigger and able to withstand my low-tech layering technique (the same one utilizing a rock that netted you Pure Bea*g*). You are welcome to a layeree.
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#3 of 3 posted
20 JUN 15 by
Kim Rupert
Hi Tessie, thank you! Pure Bea is exploding in the cooler, damper climate here in Santa Maria, thank you! I hope your family emergencies have resolved themselves well and all is good. I'm glad you're OK!
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Initial post
26 DEC 14 by
Sambolingo
Available from - David Austin Roses Limited, UK
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Initial post
7 MAR 08 by
Cass
Good herbarium specimens can be viewed online at the New Mexico State University online herbarium. They capture the wedge-shaped leaflets. The index is: http://biology-web.nmsu.edu/herbarium/full-images/index.html
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#1 of 1 posted
7 MAR 08 by
RoseBlush
Cass.........
It looks like this web site should be added to HMF's USEFUL LINKS.
Smiles, Lyn
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