Is one love roses/ chamblees sending plants now ?
11 months ago
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- 11 months ago
- 11 months ago
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Compare Chamblee's and Roses Unlimited
Comments (10)I would check on their respective policies on Rose Mosaic Virus. Do they use virus-indexed/heat treated plants (some/many/all), and can you find out which ones? In zone 4 with all the cold you have, I'd put RMV high on my priority list of things to avoid as affected plants might be less likely to survive in an area with very low winter temps. Melissa...See Moreheirloom roses v chamblees v j&p
Comments (25)I really want to thank everyone for all their input! I wish I had been able to check earlier but bronchitis and asthma had me sidelined for awhile. The two I ordered that are a little iffy for my climate are heirloom and hot cocoa - the two non-Austins I got from heirloom roses. I do have some very busy baby bunnies in my backyard. I bought my daughter a chocolate vine for her "chocolate garden" semi-worried it might become invasive and the bunnies have nibbled it down to almost nothing. I sprinkled garlic around it and they haven't touched it since then (but it's been a whole two days - they might get hungry enough to brave the garlic still, but I did the same thing in my veggie garden and they haven't touched the lettuce or spinach). They're really almost too small for a fence to work. they just leap through the neighbors fence at high speed like it's not even there. If I found a small enough chicken wire that might work to slow them down a little bit though. I'm thinking my dogs and friendly neighborhood hawk probably slow them down the most. The bunnies are under the neighbor's shed (yes they are fun to watch, but not eating my plants - there's plenty of dandelions to go around) and I've noticed they're not crossing my backyard, but staying as much in the bushes and as close to "home" as possible. So since the austins are going in the new "sunrise" garden which is way across my yard, past the the lab, past the ameircan eskimo, past the hawk, past the owls...those might be relatively rabbit safe and safe for the zone so I'll try putting those in the ground (and watching for bunny damage daily) and potting the heirloom and hot cocoa (just because they're borderline for the zone and will eventually end up in a more "bunny friendly" area when planted permanently). Any recommendations on whether I should overwinter them in the garage or back porch and let them go dormant or try to bring them in the house for the winter? Which have you had the most success with?...See MoreDoes one plant mail order roses now?
Comments (7)I have for the first time got the bug to order rose bands. Mine arrived in the middle of an extreme heat and drought spell of 105 degrees! Here is an alternative to planting directly in the ground if you can't or don't want to. What I did was: I unpacked and sat all of the rose bands in the bathtub and watered them with cool water, misting them off and on for several hours. Then I put them in a pan to drain and left them for a couple of days. (It was 106 degrees out that day, and some of them came from a milder climate) The next day I potted each little rose in a larger gallon pot with good potting soil. Then I constructed a raised bed of four by fours stacked two high, one on top of each other. (in an area behind a shrub bed that only got filtered sun on the north side of my house. I took my huge bag of peat moss and reconstituted it with lots of water. I put the repotted roses in the raised bed and packed damp peat moss all around the pots, then watering in all in so that it was in close contact with the pots. The idea behind this is to keep the roots cool. My theory is that all plants have roots IN the ground, and the ground is always much more cool than the outside air. Therefore, plants like their roots cool. I could have dug and planted them in the cool earth (relatively), but I'd have gotten a heat stroke doing it. At the time, even my full sized rose bushes were suffering even with daily water, and I was having to cover them from the afternoon sun with bedsheets. (it has been EXTREME) I kept the peat moss always moist, so it kept the pots cool (they were buried clear to the top), and watered the roses twice a day, and misted them three or four times a day. I watched them like a hawk, and after a week of not wilting, not curling up, and no bugs or fungus coming out, I was rewarded with a FLOWER on one of them. Three weeks later, they have all put out new growth, some of them 6 inches or more, even in partial shade. And right now four of them have buds getting ready to flower. It is still hot out, but getting cooler, as the mid 90 degree range, but we are still in a drought from hell. I'm watering everything to keep it from dying, but the babies are doing fine. My question is, since it gets to be fall about October/November here, when or SHOULD I put them in the ground? Should I leave them in the pots, or what when I bury them? And I've got 10 more coming in mid September. My neighbor and I went in together on a huge rose order from about 4 different places, and I'm the official rose nurse. I ordered from Vintage Roses, Heirloom Roses, High Country Roses, and Chamblees Rose Nursery. NOTE: The ones that came from one place were not very big (Heirloom) healthy, but small. Do they need different treatment or more coddling?...See MoreChamblee's or Roses Unlimited?
Comments (14)This year I placed a small order from both. I have ordered many times over the years from Roses Unlimited and have ALWAYS been pleased. This year was my first year ordering from Chamblees (I went on a rose buying binge, ordering 4 minis from 2 Sisters since it was closing and then I couldn't stop-ordered about 15 roses from 4 nurseries!). I had heard so many good things about Chamblees and the prices were so good. I was also very pleased. I would say the size of the plants were comparable. Since the prices from Chamblees are cheaper, I would order what you can from them AND then order what you want but they don't carry from Roses Unlimited. I was very pleased with both orders from them. My CREAM VERANDA from Chamblees was to die for; healthy, nice glossy leaves and lovely 2-3 in blooms varying from light pink to apricot, depending on the weather and practically thornless. I highly recommend it. When I lived in Richmond, VA, my birthday treat was to order my roses from RU for pickup in late March, I would drive down and stay at a motel nearby overnight and drive back the next day. If the weather had been normal, the 4-5 greenhouses would be full of blooming potted roses for sale. I would spend a good couple of hours wandering through the greenhouses and examining the roses and smelling them. It was a treat believe me. I would usually buy an additional "just have to have" rose plant or two and then drive back with my now expanded "birthday gift to me" in the back seat. All in all, they are both good nurseries and I would highly recommend them both. Jim on the East Coast...See MoreRelated Professionals
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