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AMY
most recent 13 MAY 10 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 25 FEB 04 by Anonymous-797
Is zone 5 too cold for Russell's Cottage Rose?
grammy
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Reply #1 of 6 posted 7 DEC 03 by The Old Rosarian
Russell's Cottage rose should do okay in zone 5 as one of it's parents is rosa setigera, which is a very cold hardy rose.
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Reply #2 of 6 posted 27 MAY 05 by AMY
DEAR THE OLD ROSARIAN, SPEEKING OF ZONE 5 DO YOU HAVE ANY SUGGESTIONS FOR CLIMBERS OR LARGE SHRUBS THAT ARE MILDEW AND BLACKSPOT HARDY?
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Reply #3 of 6 posted 27 MAY 05 by The Old Rosarian
Zone 5 is an interesting one because depending where you garden, you can often push the zone limit. Here is a list of climbers that are hardy, have good disease resistance, vigorous but not all have a fragrance.
White Cap and Ilse Krohn Superior are the best of the white.
New Dwn or it's sport Awakening good for a pale pink.
Rosarium Uteresen for those that love a hpt pink.
William Baffin is an unusual strawberry pink.
Dublin Bay a good deep red but it does take time to become a climber.
Leverkusen is a semi double yellow but in some areas does get black spot which it ignores
Salita is a deep orange.
Westerland is a semi double shaded amber and red.
All of these are vigorous, have good disease resistance and should cause you no problems.
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Reply #4 of 6 posted 2 FEB 09 by Zone 5 Gardener
I live in Central Iowa and looking for a new climber to replace a pink climber lost to Rose Rosette Disease. I have a number of climbers, but this one will be in the most prominent spot. It needs to be shade tolerant. I want the longest bloom possible. The one I had was a once a season bloomer and while it was spectacular for 3 weeks, that was it. I do not want red or orange. I thought what I read about Leverkusen was of interest, but comment above on this site was not promising.

I also grow William Baffin, Uterson, Cornelia, New Dawn, Darlow's Enigma, Autumn Sunset, and a number of miniature climbers.

After this winter, I wonder if a zone 4 might be better! The one I had was a zone 4.
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Reply #5 of 6 posted 17 FEB 09 by bob diller
Plant a repeat blooming clematis with your rose to extend the bloom season of the planting. I do this a lot and like that it also adds more leafy cover to the whole scheme, as even roses that resist all disease are still a tad shy in the leaf cover department. I like the clematis Bluebird, but there are many others that look great with certain color roses. I usually go with the blues and violets.
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Reply #6 of 6 posted 13 MAY 10 by a_carl76
Don't know if you are stil looking for a hardy pink climbing rose but I would suggest 'Viking Queen'. It has large blooms in clusters up to 5 or 6 and blooms all summer long. It does extremely well here in Des Moines. I have given it winter coverage before, but have stopped because it doesn't need it. It and 'Rhode Island Red' are my two most hardy roses at the present time.
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most recent 12 JAN 06 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 20 MAY 05 by Unregistered Guest
Hi, I'm looking for a climing (not rambling) rose that can cover the chimney. I need light to medium pink climing rose. I thought about planting a constance spry, but it only blooms once in southern california.

What about new dawn? Is it too pale pink? Any suggestions?
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Reply #1 of 3 posted 26 MAY 05 by AMY
NEW DAWN IS SO PALE PINK THAT TO ME IN THE SUN IT ALMOST LOOKS WHITE. NO REAL SUGGESTIONS FOR ANOTHER ROSE OF STRONG PINK WITH THE DISEASE RESISTANCE AND HEIGHT OF NEW DAWN. CORAL DAWN DOES NOT GET AS HIGH AS NEW DAWN BUT IS A BEAUTIFUL CORAL PINK ; EIGHT FEET I THINK.
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Reply #2 of 3 posted 27 MAY 05 by Marina's Garden. Crawfordville, FL
Take a look at Eden. Gorgeous pale pink!
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Reply #3 of 3 posted 12 JAN 06 by Lenage
Hi Lee! Have you thought of trying a rose called ' Zephirine Drouhin'?It,s an older rose cultivar, ( 1868), that has recurrent bloom,is fragrant,and will readily climb for you. Depending on which area of California you are in, it should do really well for you down there. (It has bright pink flowers) :D.. Lenage.
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most recent 19 OCT 05 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 7 JUN 05 by AMY
I am looking for a perfect PINK climbing rose that will get over 6 feet in zone five Chicago IL. I want something that is mildew and blackspot resistant , I do not want to use chemicals. And a climber that REALY reblooms. I have done some research and have ordered John Davis and Victorian Memory but I want something dencer than JD and I dont know how Victorian Memory will stand up to mildew and blackspot. Jeanne Lajoie is beautiful but will only get to four feet in this zone. Rosarian Uetersen is beautiful but I have heard not a reliable rebloom and slow growing. If anyone has a suggestion please let me know. PLEASE!!!! I am tired of planting roses and then finding out it was not what I thought. New Dawn turns white in the sun and does not rebloom; the Blaze Improved is a blackspot maganet and looks awful later summer.
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Reply #1 of 9 posted 7 JUN 05 by RoseBlush
I don't have any particular roses to recommend to you right now, but I can tell you how to hedge your bets against a rose having a propensity for blackspot. R. foetida is usually identified as bringing the genes for blackspot into the gene pool for roses. When you do your research go to the rose page for the rose you are checking out and review the linage reports. If you see R. foetida anywhere in the rose's genealogy, you know the rose in question has the genes to be susceptible to bs. That does not necessarily mean it will get blackspot in your microclimate, but it's more likely to get bs than a rose that does not have R. foetida in its linage.

Based upon how frustrated you sound in your post, I would keep this in mind when you are researching your roses.


Smiles,

Lyn
helpmefind.com
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Reply #2 of 9 posted 14 JUN 05 by Unregistered Guest
To get New Dawn to re-bloom, it needs to be well fed after the first bloom and well watered. It also likes to have a mulch all around the base to keep the roots cool. Don't give up on New Dawn and it does take a couple of years to settle in and preform as the books say.
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Reply #3 of 9 posted 14 JUN 05 by AMY
This spring after it got leaves I put some bone meal around the base and watered. I have to get to the store to buy some composted manure to spread around the base af the roses. I have been wondering why the nurseries sell the comp manure for so much more than some of the grocery stores. How can I tell if they are the same quality? Any other suggestions for fertilizer? Thanks for responding!
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Reply #4 of 9 posted 15 JUN 05 by Anonymous-97891
I have only read about it, but Parade might fit the bill. Nwe Dawn is one of its parents.
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Reply #5 of 9 posted 15 JUN 05 by AMY
Parade is beautiful but I think it is only hardy to zone 6. Someone on rose fourum on the internet just posted some beautiful pics of it. I am going to try Viking Queen even though it is listed as hardy to zone 6 I have heard from two sources that is can survive -30 degrees. I also want to see about Sarah van Fleet and how hardy it is. Thanks for your suggestion.
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Reply #6 of 9 posted 16 JUN 05 by The Old Rosarian
If the manure is called steer manure, then it is the type that is gathered up in the stockyards so you can expect a lot of sawdust in it plus very low nitrogen . But don't let that put you off as it is still a good addictive to any soil. Just read the numbers on the package and if they are the same as the nurseries, then the manure will probably be the same quality.
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Reply #7 of 9 posted 16 JUN 05 by Wendy C
Have you looked at Aloha? I don't grow this rose, but it looks as if it might fill your bill.

A good organic fertilizer is Alflafla, pellets or meal. You may have better luck with it than manure.
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Reply #8 of 9 posted 19 OCT 05 by Unregistered Guest
I'm growing Rosarium Uetersen, first year only, planted bareroot this mid-May. Grafted, not own roots, z6a, Great Lakes.
In mid-October it is 6ft high, around 10 branches, looks good. Rebloomed 4 times this season, now is in flowers too. Robust and very healthy - no powdery mildew or black spot even after weeks of rain. Grows better if has enough moisture and at least 1/4 of recommended fertilizing. Grows well in poor soil. Clusters of flowers.
On negative side - don't fit intended use as complimentary plant for a deep pink slightly translucent ruffled petals groundcover: it has medium-pink opaque petals, and too much of them, like old English roses. Young petals have pointed tops, very original. Looks very luxurious anyway.
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Reply #9 of 9 posted 19 OCT 05 by Unregistered Guest
Thankyou for the info on Rosarium Uetersen!! I am going to buy one spring of 06 and try it out. I have a Sea Foam that I want to move and replace with RU. I am new at rose growing, but am realizing how each type of rose grows so differently from one back yard to another. The bloom is soooo beautiful that I will try it.
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most recent 15 JUN 05 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 15 JUN 05 by AMY
I have a question about Sarah Van Fleet. This sight lists it as hardy to zone 6. I checked a book out from the library called 'roses' RODALE ORGANIC GARDENING BASICS. they write that Sarah van Fleet is "(Zones 3-9)" . I know there are many different opinions about zone hardiness but this is a huge jump!!!
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Reply #1 of 1 posted 15 JUN 05 by RoseBlush
Amy,

If you click the References tab on the rose page, you can see a list of books used to find information on this rose. If you would like to send me the complete reference of the rose book you are using, you may send it to me at Lyn use the @ symbol.helpmefind.com and I will update the reference tab and put a note on the rose page.

Smiles,

Lyn
helpmefind.com

PS. We do not post email addys on the site, even mine, to avoid spammers.
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