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'Bring Me Sunshine' rose Reviews & Comments
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Initial post
29 JUN by
Michael Garhart
The color depth seems to be true even in hot weather. I would call it mixed egg yolk colors. After a few days, they age to peach, then pastel peach. Honestly, not too bad of a color shift.
There does seem to be some early flop. As long as it doesn't get massive and there is some lift, it will be acceptable. Health seems fine. Fragrance is in tact. Form is nice, and blooms do look romantic.
So, I think the success of this one will be determined by its mature size and whether or not it drags too much into the ground.
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#1 of 2 posted
17 DEC by
smashzen
How does this rose handle hot climate? (central Italy)
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#2 of 2 posted
19 DEC by
Michael Garhart
I couldn't tell you. I live in the Pacific Northwest.
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Initial post
26 JUN 22 by
Marlorena
This rose has a strong scent, and colour, when opening, varying from myrrh to tea later..
My rose is disease free so far [late June], but I have heard reports of mildew affecting the rose in some gardens here in England, this early summer..
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#1 of 9 posted
29 JUN by
Michael Garhart
Powdery mildew is hard to judge. Sometimes a rose is truly prone to it, and sometimes its the case of a rose that requires extra water and a more extensive root system in place. I have seen many roses mature out of powdery, and some that will have it in the best of conditions after 5 years of maturation.
This rose is new, and while I have not seen it get powdery, it does look like a water intensive rose. We'll know in a few years which scenario is truly the case. Hopefully its just one that needs to have a more mature root system.
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#2 of 9 posted
29 JUN by
Marlorena
No mildew for me but some early blackspot. 3rd year much better repeat, 2nd flush starting as soon as the first is over.
Obelisk supported, 5-6 feet, East Anglia, England..
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#3 of 9 posted
1 JUL by
Michael Garhart
Do you cut it 6-12" above ground or let it be? I truly don't want to move mine for those dimensions.
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#4 of 9 posted
1 JUL by
Marlorena
I let it be, just deadheading and light pruning to shape... it's never been pruned down at all.. here in UK it would be easy enough to keep more shrublike.
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#5 of 9 posted
1 JUL by
Michael Garhart
Ah, thank you. Yeah, I plan to keep it shorter.
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#6 of 9 posted
6 DEC by
StrawChicago heavy clay zone 5
Anyone knows if this rose makes better cut flowers than Golden Celebration (lasts 3 days in the vase for me). How is the scent of this rose compared to myrrh in Carding Mill? Carding Mill does not last long in vase, and I'm looking for ANY yellow or apricot roses that last long in the vase with decent scent. Thank you.
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#7 of 9 posted
7 DEC by
Michael Garhart
Sorry, mine had a slow start, but eventually did take off, so mostly only August blooms. The fragrance and color were quite good, and they did last reasonably well for August, but I didn't try cutting them. Remind me next year.
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#8 of 9 posted
7 DEC by
StrawChicago heavy clay zone 5
Michael: Thank you !! I appreciate all the great info. you provided to HMF. Agree with you that yellow roses require more water. I once had a Sutter's Gold own root rose that refused to bloom in a fabric Smart pot. Lesson learned: soil stays wetter in a plastic container. Or Arthur Bell (yellow) own root broke out in blackspots since I didn't like it and neglected watering in hot summer.
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#9 of 9 posted
8 DEC by
Michael Garhart
Yes, be careful with cloth pots, as well as using a table where the bottom of a grow bench is outdoors and has nothing but metal/plastic frame mostly made of air space. Either of these will air-wick your plants into misery.
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Initial post
7 AUG 22 by
Michael Garhart
Should be popular in North America. Hopefully it comes here.
Although I bought Pat Austin in 2007, and never bought an Austin again after buying that and Falstaff. Those two made me angry. I did enjoy Geoff Hamilton between 2005 and 2020. Great rose for this climate. Not an octopus that flops on the ground or go 10' tall and never blooms. I am hopeful that future bright colors are less disastrous as Pat Austin was.
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