Thursday, February 7, 2013

Now THIS is bling!

I was searching through the photos on my netbook for some pretties to post on the new Marion County Rose Society Facebook page that I’ve been working on (finally got it up yesterday – check it out!) but not many there. My old PC is big-time busted and getting new brains and guts at this time (Yay! no more spinning circles!), so I resorted to pulling photos off my old blog posts. So since I'm eager to replace the thrips that are presently at the top of the blog, here is a reprise of some really good old ones and a few from the last couple of days. It’s amazing even to me that there is such beauty in the garden in February. Got a little rain today. Hope that doesn’t mean freezing cold is on the way. Please, no.

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'Polonaise', a Buck rose
MBRC
'Mrs B. R. Cant', a Tea rose (a couple days ago)
Mme Lombard (2)
'Madame Lombard', a Tea rose
MaryGuthrie
'Mary Guthrie', a polyantha by Alister Clark
LilianAustin
'Lilian Austin' by David Austin
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'Capitaine Dyel de Graville', a Bourbon in the SDLM clan
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'White Pet', a polyantha/China
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I believe this is 'Madame Abel Chatenay', an early Hybrid Tea.
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'Mary Guthrie' again
Climbing Pinkie
'Climbing Pinkie', a polyantha a few days ago
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'Quietness', a Buck rose
ClotildeSoupert
'Clotilde Soupert, Climbing', a polyantha/Tea a few days ago
BowBells
'Bow Bells', a David Austin rose - last week, I think
Hermosa
This one had me stumped. I can't remember owning a rose with this many blooms AND leaves! Then it hit me. "Hermosa', a China/Bourbon. This photo is definitely the reason I hold onto to these three plants. She's really pinker than this, too.
LeVesuve2
'Le Vesuve', a China/Tea
Etoile de Mai
'Etoile de Mai', a polyantha - last week, I think. Life is a blur, isn't it? Especially at midnight.
Etoile de Mai2
'Etoile de Mai' again.
ClotildeSoupert2
'Clotilde Soupert', a polyantha bush form. Different angle, different look.
NurMahal
'Nur Mahal', a Hybrid Musk

Have a restful sleep, my friends. Dream of spring. It’s closer than it was yesterday. Yaaaay!

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Revision to my thrips post

For everyone who has already read yesterday's post and moved on My Plan has been revised. Thanks to a very accomplished rosey friend I have new information on dealing with flower thrips that I need to pass on to you in addition to the change I made to yesterday's post. She suggested Saf-T-Side horticultural oil. She uses it to keep the thrips population under control and says it's cheap, doesn't burn except in the hottest summer temps, and is very friendly to beneficials. I did some investigating myself last night and found that she's right, of course. I wondered why such an easy, non-toxic remedy wasn't mentioned anywhere else in my searches for an answer to thrips - or maybe I was only looking at the chemical remedies. You can read about it HERE

As I was thinking about it last night, I became concerned about getting the spray on flowers because the oil damages them, and the whole point of spraying anything is to prevent damage to the blooms. Then I considered the timing. In two or three weeks I will prune (though not all of the bushes get pruned), so they will not have flowers or even much foliage on them. (Hmm, I'm recalling Dr. Malcolm Manners' practice of stripping leaves on all of his roses at pruning time.) The roses will be leafing out and setting flower buds during the weeks after that, and that's when the thrips arrive - just in time to hit all that tender new growth. That will be the time to spray the Saf-T-Side. 

There doesn't seem to be much difference to me between the Saf-T-Side and the spinosad except in their toxicity to bees which probably amounts to a huge difference ecologically. This spraying business is definitely a reach for my inexperienced brain. Gardening is surprisingly full of new experiences, and I'm trying not to lead you all down a path that might be wrong for you - again. 

As regards horticultural oils my smart rosey friend says, "When you mention oils, people will say they burn. If they investigate, as you did, and as I have done, they will find that the Saf-T-Side is different in its formulation. I tested it this summer when I had chili thrips. Wanted to use something other than spinosad if possible. It controlled them for quite a while and didn’t burn, even in summer heat. Temperatures now are very favorable for the use of oil and will continue to be so for several more months. A lot of the burning problem depends on the age of the leaves as well. The very youngest are simply more susceptible to burning. I absolutely hate to use insecticides of any kind anymore. Saf-T-Side accomplishes so many things that I expect to be using it for most everything when I feel the need to do “something” not water related."

The main point is that if you are producing beautiful roses with what you are doing, keep doing it! Conditions in Central Florida are very different from other places, so many pests/diseases manifest themselves differently here than in other areas. Take what I say and then do some homework on the internet, and then do what your gut tells you for your micro-environment that makes you comfortable. Roses aren't rocket science, but sometimes for me it can seem that way until I get my sea-legs on some new aspect. At any rate in this age of widely available information there's no reason to be confused and alone. We're all in this together.

Friday, February 1, 2013

Bungee bling

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I took this photo last year on March 31st, intending to post it on this blog to show the get-up I had devised for disbudding and disposing of thrips-infested rose blooms. Turned out to be just too devastating to my fragile self-image, so I never used it. The season of thrips (the word is both singular and plural) is approaching again, and, apparently, they are a problem for gardeners everywhere both for ornamentals and veggies. The topic came up this week on The Roses Forum. It’s a very serious subject, but when I posted this photo last night, it evoked some good laughs. I’m going to quote here extensively from that thread.

The original poster, kpfl81 from Arkansas, was inquiring about the use of beneficial nematodes in battling flower thrips in her roses. She shared the results of her previous efforts to control the pests, as follows:

1. Tried insecticidal soaps & neem oil -- hardly any effect.
2. Bifenthrin & imidacloprid - marginal results.
3. Spinosad -- marginal.
4. Orthene -- this works; however, I have to apply almost every five days in order to keep the scoundrels down. At that rate, I start worrying about the health of the roses. Additionally, the Orthene smells so foul.


After reading the comments that followed I decided that I needed to get on the stick to be prepared for the onslaught that will come to my garden in late March/early April.  I did some research online, prepared to buy the nematodes. Found out it's expensive to ship, and since most of the thrips are on leaves, the soil treatment is not very effective. Apparently, in Florida they love oak leaves, and I am surrounded by oak trees. I had already bought the spinosad concentrate on my recent trip to Grower’s Fertilizer. It’s equivalent to Monterey spray (5% concentration), so that's what I will use, spraying the whole bush especially the undersides of leaves. There is also a Fertilome product that contains spinosad. It works because the thrips feed on the leaves as well as on contact. It is safe for bees once it is dry in a few hours. It is toxic to bees when wet, so they say to spray in the late evening or early morning when bees are not around, and I don't intend to get it on open flowers or on the flowers of companion plants. Meredith in NC “does it at night and also pulls off all the open flowers on the sages, etc. under the sprayed rose.” Spinosad loses its toxicity after 8 to 24 hours and so it may be necessary to reapply a few days later if new larva hatch.

  
I do not spray chemicals so this is a big deal for me. For the last two years I have been disbudding and deadheading the whole garden once I see that the thrips are here which did stop the repeated generations. My understanding is that the adult thrips inject their eggs into tiny, new flower buds where they grow and feed on the flower, damaging the flower at the very least and at worst preventing the flower from opening, called balling. Hopefully, killing the adults before they can accomplish this injection will protect the flowers. Typically, thrips favor light-colored roses, but last year red roses were effected. ‘Louis Philippe’ was decimated, even ‘Mrs B R Cant’ which in previous years was not bothered. Most of my roses are light colored & pastels. Not only is it disheartening to remove the whole spring flush which is the best of the year, but it is painful, backbreaking work. I look like a cotton-picker with the trash bag (taped to a large-mouth jug with the bottom cut off) tied to my waist, as shown in the photo. It usually takes two or three bags to get the job done, and when they're full, they're heavy. So I'm going to try the spinosad. I'm told that the thrips are here year-round, but April is their big breeding time. The rest of the year isn't bad, but it does explain why my blooms are never quite perfect with their brown-tinged edges.


 **  2/2/2013 - My Plan has been revised. Thanks to a very accomplished rosey friend I have new information on dealing with flower thrips that I need to include in this post. She suggested Saf-T-Side horticultural oil. She uses it to keep the thrips population under control and says it's cheap, doesn't burn except in the hottest summer temps, and is very friendly to beneficials. I did some investigating myself last night and found that she's right, of course. I wondered why such an easy, non-toxic remedy wasn't mentioned anywhere else in my searches for an answer to thrips - or maybe I was only looking at the chemical remedies. You can read about it HERE. As I was thinking about it last night, I became concerned about getting the spray on flowers because the oil damages them, and the whole point of spraying anything is to prevent damage to the blooms. Then I considered the timing. In two or three weeks I will prune (though not all of the bushes get pruned), so they will not have flowers or even much foliage on them. (Hmm, I'm recalling Dr. Malcolm Manners' practice of stripping leaves on all of his roses at pruning time.) The roses will be leafing out and setting flower buds during the weeks after that, and that's when the thrips arrive - just in time to hit all that tender new growth. I think that will be the time to spray the Saf-T-Side. There doesn't seem to be much difference to me between the Saf-T-Side and the spinosad except in their toxicity to bees which probably amounts to a huge difference ecologically. This spraying business is definitely a reach for my inexperienced brain. Gardening is surprisingly full of new experiences, and I'm trying not to lead you all down the wrong path - again. The main point is that if you are producing beautiful roses with what you are doing, keep doing it!

 
According to Wikipedia, “Spinosad is considered a natural product, and thus is approved for use in organic agriculture by numerous nations. Two other uses for Spinosad are for pets and humans… Brand names include Comfortis and Trifexis® …both brands treat adult fleas on pets.” Here’s another good article from the University of Connecticut.
 
Imidacloprid also works (it's in the Bayer drench), but it is systemic and kills bees because it gets in the pollen. REALLY, YOU SHOULD NOT USE IT (and other systemics) for the sake of the bees. The spinosad is also effective against grasshoppers and other bugs that chew on your leaves.
 
There is another product called "blue sticky thrips traps" that is available online. The thrips are actually attracted to the color blue. The sticky strips really are more of an early warning system than a cure. They clearly declare, “They’re baaack.” I'm also going to make my own "blue sticky traps" out of the large blue plastic drinking cups coated with vaseline and hang them throughout the garden. Lovely. Last year I used some kind of automotive lubricant (forgot the name) which was nasty to apply, but the vaseline will be much easier.
 
In learning how to grow roses organically I have become convinced that insecticides are a double-edged sword that can produce unintended bad results. For instance, using insecticides against spider mites produces worse infestations because they kill the beneficials that would have handled the mites had the gardener used a hard water spray and awaited their arrival. Something that we don’t realize sometimes is that insecticides kill ALL insects. ‘Broad spectrum’ is the term that’s used. Since there are beneficial insects called predators that gardeners want to encourage to inhabit their gardens, it is absolutely counter-productive to spray these broad-spectrum insecticides. And perhaps you’ve heard of the devastation to bee populations in recent years. As far as I'm concerned, the bees are a protected species and are welcome, friendly guests in my garden. I love listening to their buzzing as I go about my work in the garden. So let's be safe out there and kind to our beneficial bug friends.
 
My afore-mentioned laughs came from Merlcat’s response to my photo which I must include:
It's the bungee that pulls the outfit together.
Bungee bling?! :)
All jokes aside. I love this picture. This is how beautiful gardens are made. Getting dirty and wearing garbage bags and bungees! :)


Aren’t gardeners wonderful?!

 
To read the entire thread on GardenWeb's Roses Forum, go HERE.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Some glamour shots

The thing about glamour shots is that they are tight, zoomed-in shots that mostly exclude. I suppose every gardener dreams of whole garden glamour shots. Someday – maybe this spring, I hope – mine will be wide, all-inclusive ones. The very thought of it makes my heart skip. However, now in the dead of winter I only have small spots of glamour scattered around the garden. I always fear that tight shots give a false impression of my garden, and that if someone actually strolled through it after seeing a post like this, they’d think I had lied and wonder where all those beautiful roses are. Well, they’re there – a couple on this bush, one on that bush, mostly few and far between, but their scarcity only makes them more precious and makes me all the more impressed with a rose that can produce such beauty when all around it others are sleeping.

IMG_8528
'Maggie' is coming into her own a year after being planted as a tiny rooted cutting. The cane that holds this bouquet is about 3-1/2 feet tall and vertical. Her flowers have no white or light pink in them. Unfortunately, the coloring in this photo is a figment of my camera's imagination, and I can't correct it, but this is her first such bloom cluster and I simply must post it. She is fastastically fragrant, too. Can't wait to see her growth this year.
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The femme fatale of my garden is, of course, 'Souvenir de la Malmaison' .
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SDLM cycles quickly from flush to flush, and I wouldn't be without her even if her ugly stage does at times tempt me to reduce her numbers from three to two or maybe even one. The ugly stage only lasts a matter of days, so I buck up and wait for the beauty to reappear almost magically.
IMG_8533
When she re-clothes herself with deep green foliage and her big, round buds appear everywhere, I say to myself, "See! What were you thinking?"
IMG_8538
'Le Vesuve' is definitely struggling with her health, and unfortunately, this gardener hasn't much of a clue as to why, but she has two blooms on her now. Somehow I managed to get the setting sun behind me in this photo. I can't figure out where the reflection is coming from.
IMG_8539
Here's 'Maggie' again. Her color is a deeper crimson than in this photo..
IMG_8542
Not a great pic of 'Clotilde Soupert', the bush. These all-white blooms are more summer-like and a little puzzling. Since her foliage is a bit yellowish perhaps she's showing her need for food. She's trying to flush with our recent warm weather, and I just don't think she's got enough energy to pull it off. Soon I'll be pruning her and the January feeding will be kicking in and she'll be off to the races. Of course, I could be totally wrong in my analysis - just guessing.
IMG_8548
Now here's 'Clotilde Soupert, Climbing' showing us more typical cool-weather blooms.
IMG_8550
Another cluster of Climbing CS. So fragrant as well as beautiful.
IMG_8552
'Hermosa' is a great small bush, only reaching about 3-1/2 feet tall and a couple of feet wide in my garden. I have three of them planted together. In the spring they are continuously covered with pepto pink flowers and are quite breathtaking. They have a peppery sweet fragrance courtesy of their China heritage.
IMG_8556
'Madame Abel Chatenay' surprisingly has a single bloom on her nearly naked body and one bud. I thought I would be pruning bare canes, but she is leafing out a little. You can see why she's my Belle of the Ball.
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I had to snap this pic of the first bud of  'Belinda's Dream'. Fuzzy focus in the waning light but exciting nonetheless.
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Talk about exciting!! 'Rosette Delizy' is giving me palpatations. Planted last November, I think, she is really filling out and has lots of flower buds on the tips of her new canes. She's between Maggie and Madame Lombard, so I think her yellow/carmine pink combination will be lovely in this part of the front garden especially with yellow daylily 'Sherry Lane Carr' very nearby.
IMG_8567
Here's a tall shot of the lower part of  'Clotilde Soupert, Climbing'. I like the way she blooms in the middle of herself and not just at the ends. She's only a couple of years old, so her blooming will only get better. I wonder what her spring flush will look like.
IMG_8568
Granted it's not really black spot season, but I am so pleased with 'Hot Cocoa'. Being a grafted rose and an older plant than my typical own-root bands is making for some unexpected instant gratification. She's shooting up a nice, strong cane already.
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The lovely 'Mrs B R Cant' is actually a deeper raspberry than she appears here.
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'Bolero 2004' is one of my new $7 grafted modern roses that I got at Lowe's. Several flower buds offer more instant gratification if they survive the rest of our winter.
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This rose may or may not be a mistake on the gardener's part. First of all, she is a bareroot grafted rose ($5.98 at Home Depot) that had already broken dormancy and was sprouting new canes which I thought was a good thing. Upon further education on the subject, I learned it may not be "productive growth", but I'm not sure what that means exactly. I bought this 'Perfume Delight' fragrant Hybrid Tea in my recent mini buying-binge of cheap fragrant modern roses, and I think 'Pink Peace' might have been a better choice, disease-wise. But I didn't want to just throw her away, so off we go on our adventure together. She's in a pot because there's no more ground available.
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So I'm just going to sit back and watch what happens. Basically, "new growth" is always a good thing - in the plant and in the gardener who is spreading her wings beyond OGRs at least a for a little while. Feels like a Star Trek episode - boldly going where no man has gone before.
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This is 'Heirloom', a bareroot from Aldi that to this novice seems to be a better quality plant than the Home Depot rose with more canes, less wax and no growth at time of purchase. It was inside in air conditioning whereas Home Depot's were outside under shade cloth. This new modern bed is the former fish pond. Two whites (Bolero 2004 and Pope John Paul II) and the deep lavender Heirloom will be pretty together with daylilies and a purply 'Le Baron' dahlia.
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The winter shadow cast by the house is slowly moving closer to the house. Eventually, it will move several feet to the left of this photo with only two or three feet of shadow remaining and a sun-drenched patio. The cool shade is nice, but the spring sun's arrival will be most welcome.
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I so enjoy this side of the back garden, but it seems it is forever in transition. There are three new roses in the bed along the fence - 'Vanity', 'The Charlatan' and 'Moondance', and poor 'Alexander Hill Gray' took a near-death spiral after I moved him a few feet last November. He's finally coming around. 'Duchesse de'Auerstadt' is on the arbor on the left with clematis 'Venosa Violacea' and 'General Gallieni' is at the far right. 'Pat Austin' still resides in the clay pot, not doing much but noticeably more vertical recently. Photos always look like an indistinct jumble, but here it is anyway.
My blogging seems to have shifted to midday. Seems like I should be outside in the garden not inside on the computer, so that’s where I’m headed now. It’s time to get out the 8-foot ladder and the long grabber, because the climbers all need to be tied up again. Oh, joy! One of my least favorite tasks that I always procrastinate on and that always seems to come un-done and need to be redone - sort of like cleaning the toilet and about as enjoyable. That's no way to end a blog post, is it? Okay, attitude adjustment coming. Gardening isn't all pretty flowers and peaceful strolling. There is also strenuous work involved which I accept easily on the ground, but eight feet in the air is another animal altogether. Suck it up, woman, and get to it. When it's done, you'll love it!!

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Video time

Whether it's from growing up in the television age or just the way my brain is wired, I seem to learn from watching. Let me watch you do a thing, and I will be able to repeat it on my own. So how-to videos on YouTube are priceless and free, to boot. Also, meeting people who know roses on video whom I will likely never get to meet in person is a real opportunity to glean from the experts. This morning I stumbled across a video which lead to another and another. You know how that goes. So I thought I'd list the ones I really liked here so you could simply click away. It proves the old adage that learning can be fun, so let's get teachable.


This first one by Paul Zimmerman is about planting roses in shadier locations. Really?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3B8DkGw8c0


Terry Reilly of the San Jose Rose Garden shows how to plant a bareroot rose for optimal bloom.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3B8DkGw8c0


A surprising method of pruning Drift roses by Steve Hutton of Conard-Pyle Roses.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3fCD3L8AAWc&list=UUEd0UPicjMLHANuS5UDKvxA


Steve Hutton of Conard Roses and Alain Meilland of the House of Meilland, rose breeders for 150 years, discuss the evolution of the rose.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&v=6JibSngrPHo&NR=1


A series of four videos with Alain Meilland and Jacques Ferare as they walk through the rose fields discussing their roses.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZOmndj9iD4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&v=UnwuBZNlvaM&NR=1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXHgib_ElSA&feature=endscreen&NR=1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&v=17meRmZvT5M&NR=1


Alain Meilland's father introduced the 'Peace' rose in 1935. Very interesting,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&v=6JibSngrPHo&NR=1


They weren't just kidding when they called this one "A Little Bit of Paradise".
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=fvwp&v=0q2gpG-MHLE&NR=1


A different take on roses for arbors by Paul Zimmerman.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NkyqAJKEA8w


Do climbing roses scare you? Paul Zimmerman takes the mystery - and the fear - out of dealing with climbers.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rf7F5qhChFM


Knock Outs are vigorous roses, to say the least. Here's a good look at taming them with a late winter/early spring pruning.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_192COm58qE


A winter rose garden in Florida takes some getting used to for this Floridian. Admittedly, it doesn't look as bad as the post-hard freeze garden, but my vision is still colored by what is coming so the actual view is more tolerable. Mine has been through only a couple of nights of 32 degrees (quite unusual) several weeks apart, so there are only a sprinkling of blooms and the greenery is less. Some roses are in desperate need of pruning, but that must wait until the freezes are past. The last freeze was a couple of weeks ago, I think, and temps have stayed in the 70's during the day since then, so the roses think it's spring and are sending out new growth like crazy. 'Mme Lombard' has three basal breaks coming out of the ground!! Oh, joy! The teas are suckers for this weather. Being evergreen, they are growing machines, and my heartbreak will be huge when the hard freezes come during the next month or so - and they will come. I've got the gardens tidied up pretty well. New things are planted, and this week the plan is to go get the composted horse manure, spread it and then the wood chip mulch. I'll be cleaning out the shed, too. This weather has been glorious!!

So whether your roses are the virtual kind this winter or the kind you actually walk among, enjoy your gardens!!

Monday, January 21, 2013

January feeding

Our rose society’s award-winning newsletter, Rose Rambler, offers great articles and practical information every month from September through May, a definite perk that comes with membership. One of the most useful pages is the monthly check list. It’s a neat reminder of what should be done in the garden in the next month. All I can say is that’s it’s a good thing I retired because I have never had time to read them in time for them to be useful – until this month! I did not know that “many rosarians recommend applying organics in January so they can be broken down by microbes and become available to the plant in early spring.” (Don’t forget, since spring comes earlier here, this timing is specific to Florida.) So I’ve been doing it wrong or at least not optimally because in previous years I have applied my organics around the end of February or early March when I was spreading horse manure compost and mulch. Last year I did manage to read one item on the check list. “Apply 1/2 cup of Epsom salts (magnesium sulfate) per medium bush 30 days prior to pruning.” So this year I was prepared to get an early start.

Since feeding time is upon me, last Thursday I took a rather long ride to Newberry to Growers Fertilizer Corp., because they sell their own sewage sludge for $6.13 for 40 pounds. That’s called half price compared to Milorganite!! That made the trip worthwhile, and I bought 10 bags which hopefully should last a few years. I also got 50 pounds of Epsom salts which I applied on Friday. This year I don’t have access to my usual Purely Organic Rose Food, since I finally ran out of my stash, and I figured what was available at Lowe’s, Rose-Tone, would be more expensive than I wanted, but the only organics that Growers had was cottonseed meal (50 lb for $30). This made me decide to make my own “complete food”. I bought the cottonseed meal and went online to find a recipe. Here it is.

Use equal parts of:

Alfalfa Meal – NPK 2-1-2
Fish Meal - NPK 10-6-2
Cottonseed Meal – NPK 6-.4-1.5
Blood Meal – NPK 12-0-0
Bone Meal – NPK 3-15-0
Sludge – NPK 5-3-0


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Naturally, there were problems with this recipe. First, I couldn’t find alfalfa meal, only the usual pellets, and I opted to wait until after pruning to apply them. Soybean meal is an option, too, but I couldn't find that either. Also, couldn’t find fish meal, but I did find a smallish bag of Kelp Meal at Seminole Feed. It’s a good source of trace minerals, and roses love seaweed. I also opted to not include the blood meal and sludge at this time because they are immediately available to the plants, and I don’t want them growing yet – anymore than they already are anyway. The weatherman says we’ll have 32 degrees tomorrow night, and certainly more freezes and harder freezes are coming. I also added sulfur and greensand to the mix. Sulfur not only lowers pH, but it also Greensand is slow-acting potassium, and I was ecstatic to find it at Seminole.

So in a 5-gallon bucket I added 4 cups each of the red items and 1/2 cup each of the kelp meal and sulfur (which was a total guess on my part) and mixed them thoroughly. (I'll probably put the rest of the kelp meal in the fish hydrolysate that I'm going to make that I learned about in another Rose Rambler article this month. No more bottled fish emulsion!) I repeated this three more times to fill the bucket as full as I could carry it. It turned out I used four buckets (plus a little) to feed all the roses, daylilies and about two-thirds of the azaleas. I still have more left of all the ingredients. Since the Purely Organic used to cost $25 for a 50-lb bag and I needed 2 bags, I probably didn’t save much if any money doing it this way, but I had no choice and I’m happy.

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50 Pounds of Epsom salts and 400 pounds of sewage sludge - oh, goodie!

It’s not as critical to scratch organics into the soil as it is for chemicals because the microbes manage to find them as long as they’re touching soil, but it is advisable to water everything afterwards. Since my back hates scratching it in anyway, I kill two birds with one stone with a hard stream of water from the hose. I just have to be careful not to obliterate any delicate plants in the process with my bad aim. I did good today – everything got mixed, applied and watered in and no plants were blasted apart...and DH took me out for Chinese!

As I moved along, I dug up a few Purple Coneflowers that were invading the space of some roses. (I told you they’re thugs, didn’t I? Beautiful, but they don’t play nice in this small garden especially when planted by the dozen.) Then I noticed that one of my two ‘Fred Ham’ daylilies had gotten huge and was too big for its space. How convenient that I had just taken out a coneflower on the other side of ‘Madame Abel Chatenay’ from ‘Fred Ham’. So I split off two big fans from Fred and planted them in the newly vacant spot on the other side of MAC. I’m so pleased that I’ll have twice as many of these large, gorgeous daylily blooms this year.

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By way of follow-up I think I told you that I had bought a bareroot rose, ‘Heirloom’, at Aldi the other day after I had bought a grafted ‘Hot Cocoa’ at Lowe’s. Well, the modern-rose bug has given me an awful bite, and I’ve been scratching the itch. I checked both Aldi stores for more bareroots, but they were sold out. The other Lowe’s had no roses, so I hit my Lowe’s again on Sunday. I found two with labels, ‘New Zealand’ and ‘Moondance’. Referring to Helpmefind.com on my trusty smartphone in the garden center, I discovered that both of these roses are described as “very disease resistant”. Now, one location’s very disease resistant rose may be another location’s black spot magnet, but what the heck, there aren’t that many very disease resistant modern roses out there, so I grabbed them. (Remember…I don’t spray fungicide.) For $7 each I got two beautiful, fragrant roses, albeit a bit bedraggled. I guess it’s true…if you buy them, space will appear, because I am finding places for them in the garden, either in the ground or in pots. On Sunday at the rose society meeting Annie said for $6 each she got Oklahoma, Mr. Lincoln and another fantastic hybrid tea rose (darn! what was the name?) at the Home Depot in…oh, gee, was it Crystal River? Well, wherever it was, keep your eyes peeled, folks. Roses are out their for the taking. With a little TLC they’ll make wonderful additions to your gardens. I know I’ll be out there looking. No self-control!!

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

No more pond

Is anyone else good at tangents? ...those things that take you off the what-should-be path and send you down the what-shouldn’t-be path? My brain is so capable of being switched-on to something with all the intensity of a nuclear blast. Have you ever tried to put a mushroom cloud back in the bottle? Blessedly, I only had to live with this tangent for two months instead of years and years.

You see, maintenance isn’t my strong suit. You knew that, right? Around Christmas the pond went from clear on Sunday to tea-colored on Monday and then black on Tuesday. I could only see the fish if they were a few inches from the surface. Miss Clueless was dumbfounded. That’s the thing about tangents. There’s never a knowledge prerequisite.

So Saturday I was going to fill it in, but then the goldfish were so cute so I tried to save the day. DH suggested the Shop-Vac to suck out the leaves. Then we put some one-inch foam and some quilt-batting in the tank to filter the water, but the vacuum only worked until the tank got full, so it was an on/off, on/off proposition that would likely take the rest of my life. Then I asked DH if the pump could be used to filter somehow. I know you know the answer to that question, but I have zero mechanical abilities. So I hooked up the pump appropriately. (No joking – I had to have him explain it three times. “Hook it up” just was not sufficient.)

The batting was getting blacker and blacker, and by 2AM the fish were visible just below the ledge. I was excited and decided what I needed was a Bio-filter for $62 and the required vinyl tubing for $15 – $20 and a vacuum for $25 if I could find one with more than three stars that half the reviewers on Amazon didn’t hate, but I wasn’t settled on all of that so I didn’t pull the trigger. I did find two books that looked to be the perfect solution to my ignorance of fish and ponds, and I ordered them.

Sunday morning I dashed out to see the clear water and the bottom of the pond. That didn’t happen. Visibility was still terrible even after filtering for 18 hours. I was dejected. I couldn’t get past the thought of killing the fish, so there was no decision on Sunday and no decision on Monday, but Tuesday was different. Different day, different tangent. I made the decision to go buy the bulk potting soil and fill ‘er up. Before I left I turned on the pump, and when I got back an hour later it was almost dry.

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It's going to be my Hybrid Tea bed, my cutting bed. Well, la-de-da! Never had one of those before.
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I was at Aldi today. They had body-bags (bare-root roses so named because they're stuffed in plastic, and they're kind of a no-no especially in Florida and prone to failure because their root systems are chopped short) for $4.97, so I got 'Heirloom' which I had been eyeing online, and it's soaking in water now. Possibly another tangent but I prefer experiment. Apparently, it gets bigger than I thought and may get some BS, so I'm going to plant it over by the post where the purple clematis is growing. Borrowed leaves are still leaves. I have hopes for the cuttings I got from the bouquets at the Festival of Roses. One is growing new shoots like crazy, and 'Sweet Juliet', 'Bride's Dream', and a couple others are doing well. They won't all fit, but I hope at least three will, and I have pots ready for the ones that don't fit.
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Black dirt is indeed possible in Florida. You just have to truck it in. I threw on a bunch of Milorganite so the worms would hurry over, and then when I was cleaning up, I noticed two bags of Black Hen (chicken manure) that had been hanging around so long the plastic bags were disintegrating. So I threw them on. Well, not exactly. The former granules were now congealed into actual wet poo of a very solid consistency and stink-ee! Oh, my goodness! It was like tar, very hard to break up. If this turns out to be a very successful bed, I'll be using this stuff a lot.
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Now on to the pretty faces of 'Clotilde Soupert, Climbing'. These blooms were quite large, almost 3 inches across.
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Considering these were buds when we had a recent freeze, I'm amazed they're so gorgeous.
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And they're fragrant, too.

When my work was done today (it only took four hours), I had the feeling I was back in my comfort zone, the place where I have the most control over what goes on. I’m comfortable with dirt. I know dirt. Dirt is good.