2014 rose of the year....cast your vote
bayourose
9 years ago
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Michaela (Zone 5b - Iowa)
9 years agoMarlorena
9 years agoRelated Discussions
2014 Watermelon Report/review
Comments (40)I am over here in Southeast Montana and have sandy soil that melons love. When I started raising melons in the 1970's, my Burpee Hybrid muskmelons were simply delicious, now I cannot get hardly anything good out of a muskmelon. The exception was the Sunder which was superb, but Willhite quit selling. I can get good-tasting Savors in the early part of the season, but the later ones rot before they taste good. As for watermelons, some do not do well for me (Desert King). I have had only two watermelons that had a "perfume" when eaten. The one I remember the most was a White Seeded Simpson. I used to grow lots of watermelons, did not rotate and eventually my field got too diseased. Now, years later, I start on new ground, till in lots of leaves and I have vines all over the place. I really like the Sweet Favorite. They ripen early (around a month after setting on), and I can turn around and get two crops off the same vine. Some Sweet Favorites do not get the sweetness of the others, I wonder if one should withhold the water for a few weeks before ripening. To tell when a melon is ripe: I used to scratch the melon with the date it set on. For example, if a melon set on July 19, I would take a knife or nail and scratch "J19 on the skin and the resulting scar would remain. Then, since it takes six weeks for most watermelons to ripen, I would harvest the melon six weeks later (September 1st for the above J19 melon. Now, I think I will take an ear tag (that they use in a calf's ear), and if a watermelon sets on July 19 th, write that on the ear tag and set it beside the melon. I actually would go out July 23 d, see a watermelon the size of a chicken egg, and subtract a few days and write J19 on the tag. But I do agree that the Orange Glo is a very delicious watermelon. And it has a taste that is more than sweet. This year my Orange Glos tailed off in sweetness at the end of the season. I tried the Moon and Stars a few years ago and was impressed with their earliness. But I ran into problems this past year as I picked the first ones too early. I think that in excellent soil, they ripen later than if they are on just average soil. And they do taste very good. This year, I will plant around 50% Sweet Favorite and 50% Moon and Stars. With a few new ones. I finally found a source for the Tiger Baby (Anderson Seed and Garden Logan Utah.) The Tiger Baby is a small melon, short vines and ripens in 30 days from setting on for me. The flesh is only pink, but I am going to try plastic tunnels, underground heating to try and get very early melons. I like to take a heat lamp (put in a 100 watt bulb), and set it next to the watermelon plants in the plastic hot kap for overnight heating of the soil (heat lamp is face down on the dirt). Sometimes the bulb breaks due to moisture on the bulb. But the plants really thrive and grow fast if it is 100 degrees in the hot kap at night. I like the Tiger Baby's short vines because I have to cover all my watermelons with wire with small holes due to the hail we seem to get every year. Is that called hardware cloth?...See MoreYour MOST Perfect Rose
Comments (75)Hi Lynn: Burlington roses in Southern CA has Annie L. McDowell and many Old Garden Roses like Excellenz von Schubert ... which I like just as much as Annie. She has 380+ big roses for $11 per band, and 160+ mini-roses for $7.50 per band. The shipping to my Chicagoland was cheap: $20 for 14 roses last year, but the postage went up this year. She has a big selection of Old Garden Roses that smell great, like Comte de Chambord. She has 2 Austins: Benjamin Britten and Ab. Darby. She has many lavender (Veichenblau) and thornless roses (Pink gruss, Gruss, Marie Pavie & Daly). Burling is honest and gives prompt service. She will email you the list of roses she has if you request at: BurlingtonRoses@aol.com It's best to order in advance, the popular ones are sold out fast. I really miss thornless mini-rose Norwich Sweetheart (smells wonderful !!), Sweet Arlene (thornless), Comte de Chambord, Rose du Roi, La Reine, and Louis Odier were all sold out by Christmas. There's already a long waiting list for Annie from last year, so the sooner you order, the better your chance. If you ask her the types you want, she will recommend for you. I asked her for the most-blooming polyantha in her nursery, she gave me the list. Any questions you ask, she will answer promptly ... Burling is a very knowledgeable rosarian. This post was edited by Strawberryhill on Fri, Jun 28, 13 at 22:33...See More2014 ARS Roses in Review Survey - Your Input Needed!
Comments (3)Diane - I really appreciate this reminder you send every year and I learn to rely on it. I had about 30 roses I grow or have grown in this year's list. Not only is it great to get an automatic copy of the RIR survey results for your area each year, but there can be other perks of filling out this survey. Once years ago there were so many respondents from our region that there were random drawings of a gift certificate to people who responded from that region, which was a great unexpected perk. Regardless, we always wish there were better information about the roses we grow or want to grow from our own region, and this is the means by which this kind of information is gathered. Even if you only grow a few roses, be sure to check it out. Most of the roses are relatively new releases but not entirely, so do check it out! Cynthia...See MoreShare your Travels.... Gardens, Roses, History & Culture world over
Comments (133)Straw: I would rate the climate of Amman close to 9a or 8b of USDA standards with few big differences. It has cool and wet winters with lot of rains and some snow and warm (but not very hot) summers with no rains. I think this aspect also plays an important role in the size of roses here. The roses grow huge in the Northern Areas of Pakistan as well and it also has cool summers with almost no rains along with very cold and wet winters. Additionally, the ground bed naturally has little soil in Amman area as it is mostly composed of limestone rock. Most soil put in the gardens for growing roses / other plants is brought from other places and looks like a fertile well drained soil to me. best regards to...See MoreRosecandy VA, zone 7
9 years agoken-n.ga.mts
9 years agokentucky_rose zone 6
9 years agoBrittie - La Porte, TX 9a
9 years agoSylviaWW 9a Hot dry SoCal
9 years agobayourose
9 years agokentucky_rose zone 6
9 years agoAquaEyes 7a NJ
9 years agoRosecandy VA, zone 7
9 years agosara_ann-z6bok
9 years agoingrid_vc so. CA zone 9
9 years agoKippy
9 years agoAlana8aSC
9 years agoseil zone 6b MI
9 years agothonotorose
9 years agobayourose
9 years agoAquaEyes 7a NJ
9 years agoArbutusOmnedo 10/24
9 years agoMichaela (Zone 5b - Iowa)
9 years agoAlana8aSC
9 years agokathy9norcal
9 years agobayourose
9 years agoSoFL Rose z10
9 years agocanadian_rose
9 years agonanadollZ7 SWIdaho
9 years agoMichaela (Zone 5b - Iowa)
9 years agoMarlorena
9 years agoLynn-in-TX-Z8b- Austin Area/Hill Country
9 years agonanadollZ7 SWIdaho
9 years agoLynn-in-TX-Z8b- Austin Area/Hill Country
9 years agoSow_what? Southern California Inland
9 years agoArbutusOmnedo 10/24
9 years agonanadollZ7 SWIdaho
9 years agokentucky_rose zone 6
9 years agonanadollZ7 SWIdaho
9 years agosara_ann-z6bok
9 years agokentucky_rose zone 6
9 years agotitian1 10b Sydney
9 years agojaspermplants
9 years agobethnorcal9
9 years agoMichaela (Zone 5b - Iowa)
9 years agoSoFL Rose z10
9 years agokentucky_rose zone 6
9 years agonanadollZ7 SWIdaho
9 years agonanadollZ7 SWIdaho
9 years agobayourose
9 years ago
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