Gruss an Teplitz???
jaxondel
15 years ago
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jbfoodie
15 years agokaye
15 years agoRelated Discussions
Rushes of blood to the head - Gruss an Teplitz
Comments (27)Just for a quick and superficial comparison, here's a photo I took a couple of years ago of my Mr. Lincoln bloom. The white HT is a mystery rescue rose. If anyone can suggest a possible identity, please feel free. I haven't a clue. Both Lincoln and the white HT are very fragrant. The room was filled with perfume from these two. My Lincoln has finished its first flush, so I can't post a current, detailed photo at this time. Carol This post was edited by PortlandMysteryRose on Wed, Jun 11, 14 at 3:04...See MoreGruss an Teplitz- questions
Comments (23)No blackspot or powdery mildew here. Gruss an Teplitz, grows here, a little short rose. It had to be heavily pruned this spring, but bounced back much better than many others. It's on its own roots. I got it from Greenmantle nursery 3 years ago. It takes 4 years of patience to get a big rose going here. I wasn't all that fired up about the hot red color, but enjoyed the repeat blooming. So far, no bloom yet this year. I'd say this rose will make a nice short shrub around here, eventually. It is about two feet now from being cut to the ground and should hit 3.5 feet by fall. I see no problems with the lack of grafting....See MoreStrawberry Hill - Gruss an Teplitz in zone 5?
Comments (2)Thank you, Mariannese for answering sunny's question. I take hardiness with a grain of salt, it's how vigorous that particular own-root is, and how suitable that own-root is for your soil. Liv Tyler is hardy to zone 6b, but it died on Andrea in Cambridge, England, zone 8. It also died on another person in my Chicagoland. However, Liv Tyler loves my alkaline clay and the root became big, I didn't protect it over the winter, but it's green to the tip, with 40+ buds now. Margit Schowalter from Alberta, Canada, zone 4b, posted this in HMF: ""GRUSS AN TEPLITZ - Hardiest Hybrid Tea Rose, continuous bloomer, dark red double. Plant deep, 1 foot, and you will have it for years. Each $1.50. Best of all in my opinion for the district. Boughen Nurseries Catalogue, Valley River, Manitoba, Canada 1950. [note: Valley River is in Canadian Zone 2]...See MoreRoses: the bad, the good and your favorite colors & scents?
Comments (79)Bump up this thread to admire Mas_loves_roses with a vigorous Sharifa Asma. I don't know if hers is grafted or own-root. My Sharifa as own-root is so wimpy !! Also appreciate Seaweed posting so many blooms in her alkaline clay garden in Southern California. Re-post Seaweed's tip for bare-root roses (grafted on Dr. Huey): "When I received the bare root from Regan, first prep the hole with Gypsum. Then filled tap water & let it settled. Next filled with Gardner & Bloome brand organic plating mix, right below the root, added one tablespoonful of David Austin's Mycorrhizal fungi. Last: put in bare root, added pumice, earthworm castings, and diluted mix of superthrive, Eleanor's VF-11, plus more water."...See Morewindeaux
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