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'Electric Poetry' rose Reviews & Comments
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Initial post
25 OCT 12 by
Patricia Routley
I am fascinated with this rose, Warren. It is so interesting to look at the photos, and then to read the file on it. Is there any change of colour in the bloom?
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#1 of 6 posted
3 JUN 13 by
Warren Millington
Patricia I have just realized you had made a comment here. The bloom colour red remains the same intensity but the white eye becomes larger as the bloom ages. This little rose is a bloom machine.
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#2 of 6 posted
3 JUN 13 by
Patricia Routley
Thank you. If it is a bloom machine, it is not just a red trifle then
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#3 of 6 posted
28 MAR 14 by
Michael Garhart
Its very pretty and very interesting to look at.
Do you have any theories as to why the ploidy difference relates to how different it looks from your usual china? If you note, Tamango, a 2nd gen. from Mutabilis, is tetraploid, and tends to also create red blends down the line, with darker edging. Even Preference deepens the edges to a darker red when it ages in the sun.
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#4 of 6 posted
29 MAR 14 by
Warren Millington
The thing about Mutabilis is, nobody has a clue of its origin or parent linage. Electric poetry's plant and leaf structure are very china looking. The latest photographs show a plant which has not been pruned for 2yrs.
I feel in my attempt to double the chromosomes ( which may have happened) a recessive gene, may have been doubled creating this cultivar. My expertise in genetics is fairly modest and can only assume what may have happened.
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#5 of 6 posted
29 MAR 14 by
Michael Garhart
Its possible. I think its likely very involved. Have you ever attempted to double a double?
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#6 of 6 posted
29 MAR 14 by
Warren Millington
Michael I was reading literature about this compound, and its use in chromosome doubling. They discussed it was only effective in diploid and triploid.
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