HelpMeFind Roses, Clematis and Peonies
Roses, Clematis and Peonies
and everything gardening related.
Member
Profile
PhotosFavoritesCommentsJournal 
Lionheart
most recent 23 DEC 16 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 6 SEP 05 by Anonymous-98355
Hardy to at least USDA Zone 4. Completely hardy here in USDA Zone 5. Gorgeous flowers with a haunting old rose fragrance. Queen of Denmark has a long spring blooming period of at least several weeks. The shrub itself remains clean and fairly orderly. On its own roots it tends to sucker, but not overwhemingly so. Establishes quickly, so it's very productive by its second year. Disease resistant, insect resistant, and even the deer and rabbits don't seem to bother it much, unlike some of the other roses that are nearby. A real winner, especially for cold zoners.
REPLY
Reply #1 of 1 posted 23 DEC 16 by StrawChicago Alkaline clay 5a
Fantastic review. Thank you !!
REPLY
most recent 4 JUL 08 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 27 JAN 06 by Anonymous-98355
Lovlier in person than in pictures, a carefree rose for cold zones. Nice (but not strong) fragrance, hardy, good repeat. During the cool weather of autumn the interior of the bloom is a lovely, constrasting darker pink/mauve, making a striking bloom when fully open. Quite disease resistant. Grows willingly and steadily and is vigorous.
REPLY
Reply #1 of 2 posted 4 JUL 08 by anonymous-137084
You mentioned that Mike's Old-Fashioned Pink is a carefree rose for cold zones... how cold? It is only rated as hardy to 6b; do you have any idea how it would do in a 5b area? Also, is it by any chance blackspot resistant? It's awfully pretty, but I would like to have a better idea of how it might act before I purchase it.
REPLY
Reply #2 of 2 posted 4 JUL 08 by Unregistered Guest
Hi. This rose is growing in zone 5A, upstate NY, near Albany. After 4 or 5 years the canes are about 5 feet tall. The plant is about 3.5 feet wide. I would guess that it would get larger in a warmer zone.

As with any rose that is grown in colder climates with short growing seasons, it needs a good 2-3 years to "come into its own", although this rose was productive and vigorous when young. It reliably improves with age/maturity. Canes get long and thick and are self-supporting. Foliage is lush. Leaves are of a modern type -- heavy substance, somewhat shiny. It never looks leggy or naked along the canes, unless the sawfly larvae go unchecked and skeletonize most of the leaves.

Blooms occur all over the plant, not just at the ends of the canes. It finished its spring flush about 3 weeks ago, and is setting more buds. As with most roses, the first flush is the most impressive, but repeat is generous and the blooms are eye-catching.

I prefer fragrant roses, and this rose has none that I can detect, but I like this rose so much that the lack of fragrance is not a disappointment.

Just ran outside to look and there's no blackspot yet, although other roses, like the Damasks, are showing some in the no-spray garden. It has had reasonably good bs resistance in the past, but it does show some eventually. Blackspot is later and less invasive than on most roses. In a humid climate there are very few roses that won't get some level of blackspot. Your mileage may vary.

Depending on blackspot pressures in your individual climate, you may fight it less often on this rose, but it is not entirely immune to blackspot. I'm still searching for a rose that is, and have only found one so far that comes close to being resistant -- Fields of the Wood -- but by the end of the summer even that one will have a few black spots on the leaves.
REPLY
most recent 29 JAN 06 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 28 JAN 06 by Anonymous-98355
Oops! Forgot to add that it's very hardy in USDA Zone 5.
REPLY
Reply #1 of 1 posted 29 JAN 06 by Anonymous-98355
FYI, you can edit your original post if you like.
REPLY
most recent 28 JAN 06 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 28 JAN 06 by Anonymous-98355
Hardy in USDA Zone 5. A once-bloomer that puts on a stunning show. Good fragrance. Watch those thorns! -- they're vicious and can do some serious damage to skin. Rosa Carnivorous. Still, it is healthy, hardy, and even when not in bloom the plant has a nice form.
REPLY
© 2024 HelpMeFind.com