Showing posts with label Fortuniana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fortuniana. Show all posts

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Got a narrow situation? No room?


Going up where there's no room to go out is a way to find some planting space that you didn't think your garden had. Fences, trellises (large or larger), pillars, tripods, arbors, pergolas, trees, wires anchored to the side of your house are all ways to grow vertically. Here you can see the arbor I planned for 'Crepuscule', the apricot Noisette, who promptly refused to grow up onto the arbor, choosing instead to hang a hard left horizontally.  Behind Crep is the top of a rebar arbor bearing 'Duchesse d'Auerstadt', a climbing Tea. The 4x4 wrapped in coated wire fencing is a pillar for 'Princesse de Nassau' who will be wound around the post, getting more bang for my real estate buck. And the tree supports 'R. Fortuneana'.
Thankfully, the lamp post was there, and I was able to drape Crepuscule on it in the direction she wanted to go. I assume she'll eventually go upwards as well, but she's kind of pretty on the lamp post.

  'Rosa fortuneana' is a species cross between 'Rosa laevigata' and 'Rosa banksiae', discovered around 1840 in China by Robert Fortune, the famous British plant hunter. It is a great rootstock in warmer climates like Florida, but I'm growing it up into my oak trees. In a few years this now 3-year-old once-blooming almost thornless climber which can cover 40' in one direction (that's 80' from side to side if you're math-challenged) will fill the canopy of these 12 oaks, covering it with white fully double, violet-scented flowers. It will be a truly amazing sight. The hard part was getting the canes up into the previously limbed-up trees. Standing near the tippity top of a ladder reaching with a grab-it tool was kinda hairy. I see another of these balancing acts in my future.
'Full Moon Rising', a modern Large Flowered Climber, is temporarily leaning on this metal trellis. In an effort to deny the squirrels easy access to her big fat flower buds before they can even open I moved the trellis away from the tree. I'm not optimistic about this working, but I had to do something. The spot is on the south side of the trunk and is fine during winter months, but this oak tree has a fairly wide canopy  and will be shading the rose until late in the afternoon. This might be sufficient sun but might not, so I'm hoping that the rose will climb into the tree canopy, seeking the sun. We'll see. This rose has been described as very disease resistant, and so far I'm pleased with it. Are you wondering why I bought a modern rose? It was $3 on sale and yellow. Sold!
Here she is a few days ago, growing up and then out. Of course, she is tied to the trellis, but her canes are 12-ft long and longer. Then those canes send out many side-shoots that grow equally as long, so she tends to pile her canes on top of each other in a horizontal fashion, getting taller all the time. That's more than 20 running feet of rose bush.
A scant 8 feet is all I have for sideyards. Up was the only way to go. Since Cheap is my middle name, DIY was also the only way to go, and I built this 8' tall x 12' wide wooden trellis for 'Maman Cochet, Climbing', a large and fast-growing Tea rose.  When she reached past the trellis in her first four months, I thought the arbor was a prudent addition to her support structure. The AC unit is right next to her, so I have had to train her very tightly to the trellis. (MC is a very well armed rose.) However, I have learned that her canes do not like to be bent hard, as in turning a perpendicular growing cane parallel to the trellis. The canes always die. So now I simply remove a new cane that is growing the wrong way.
Here you can clearly see Maman Cochet's width. Had I not lopped her a few months ago she would be on the roof - mine and maybe my neighbor's. She hasn't seemed to mind the trimming at all, so I will trim her if need be but I will also throw all the canes I can up on top. It worked well this time. The voluminous, buff-colored rose behind Maman Cochet and in the photo below is 'Reve d'Or', a large Noisette. She is quite a bit easier to deal with because of her lax canes. They're nice and flexible and don't really need to be bent but merely moved around and tied in place. Since she had a very positive response to an earlier trim, I am much more comfortable with trimming them. I need to trim on the neighbor's side of the fence. I figure if I keep the roses trimmed up higher than 6', then they can be walked under and won't bother anyone.



Here is 'Sally Holmes' growing on an arbor that I'm afraid will soon be too small and weak for her and the climber that's just starting to grow on the other side. Alas, I see more carpentry in my future. One of the drawbacks of being new at gardening is the seemingly constant need to back up and regroup. These two roses are the second to be situated on this arbor. 'Don Juan' just didn't work in my no-spray garden. Both of the replacements will become sizable climbers, so new accommodations will have to be made. To throw another twist into the mix, 'Sally Holmes' may not be in love with this southern full-sun position, so I may have some time to play with here. In other words it will be moving time again.

This is the trellis next to my garage at the front sidewalk, possibly a very impractical location for a rose, but 16 square feet of ground is 16 square feet of ground, and my motto is "I'll make it fit." This is also the second rose for this spot. Previously, 'Madame Caroline Testout, Climbing' lived here. Her beautiful flowers did not make up for her ugly blackspot, nakedness and lethal prickles - right at my front door. She and Mr. Shovel had an amicable meeting. The new occupant of this tiny prime spot is 'Climbing Pinkie', a climbing polyantha and the bushiest climber I have ever seen. He's only been in the ground since last September, and he has really grown. He's also almost thornless and reputed to be healthy and always covered with blooms, but I may have to add brackets over the driveway (and maybe the sidewalk) to accommodate his size.

I have five other vertically growing roses which just shows that your property is yours all the way to the edges, so why not make full use of it?

Thursday, March 10, 2011

More early blooms


'Bow Bells' - Shrub by David Austin, 1991
'Duquesa' -Tea rose, 2005, by Turner in USA
'Pink Perpetue' -Large Flowered Climber, 1965, by Gregory in UK
'Mary Guthrie' - Polyantha, 1929 by Alister Clark, Australia (Though this rose is called disease resistant, Australia doesn't have our humid conditions, and this rose isn't very disease resistant in my garden. She's very pretty but may not be here long.)
'Souvenir de la Malmaison' - Bourbon (bush), 1843, by Beluze in France
'Gruss an Aachen' - Floribunda, 1909, by Geduldig in Germany (same bloom posted a few days ago)
'Enchantress' - Tea, 1904 by John Cook & Son, USA (Will she ball or not?)
Dianthus
Dianthus
'Double White Stock', Matthiola incana, grown from seed
'Climbing Pinkie' - Polyantha, 1952 by Dering in USA
'Maman Cochet, Climbing' - Tea, 1909 by Upton  (She's more than 10' tall, probably runs 20' sideways and 10' perpendicular to the trellis. She's 3 years old.)
'Reve d'Or" - Noisette, 1869, by Ducher in France
Here's a great example of new growth (bottom right) emerging from the budeye of an old leaf which is now turning yellow because energy is being diverted to the new growth. Though there is blackspot, it really isn't the problem that it is in modern roses.
After her haircut
R. Fortuneana - Discovered in 1840 by Robert Fortune (climbing up into a couple of oak trees and cascading down as well)
'Souvenir de la Malmaison, Climbing' - Bourbon, 1893, by Bennett, UK
'Leonie Lamesch' - Polyantha, 1899, by Lambert in Germany
'Mrs B R Cant' - Tea, 1901, by Cant in UK
'Louis Philippe' - China, 1834, by Guerin in France
'E. Veyrat Hermanos' - Climbing Tea, 1895, Bernaix in France
'Mademoiselle Franziska Kruger' - Tea, 1879, by G. Nabonnand in France
Same Mademoiselle Kruger just an older bloom. Pointed and rolled petals are called "quilled".
'Le Vesuve' - China, 1825, by Laffay in France (This is the same bloom I posted a couple of days ago that looked like this one below.)