Plum Perfect or Reine des Violettes?
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Reine des Violettes and acid conditions
Comments (10)Bought potting soil should not be alcaline, usually slightly acidic. Unless you have added something that would change ph noticeably you container soil should be all right. Containers are a bit more fuzzy than for those who are in the ground, but liquid organic fertilizers are often ideal. For the types of hybrid perpetuals that send out loong straight canes I have started cutting the tip of the canes when the new shoots have developed three-four set of leaves to promote a more bushy growth. When the shoots are new and short they respond very quickly to this treatment. If you still have trouble with growth you could try a fully soluble fertilizer with all micro nutrients, the sort that dissolve completely like sugar. If this gives much better growth and flowering there is someting hibiting uptake of nutrients....See MoreReine des Violette.... Going to toss it!!??
Comments (45)Just as an update, here is a photo of my Reine des Violettes, taken this morning. This is the color the leaves have always been, with no soil amendments, nothing at all done to change the ph. Soil is quite alkaline, and we get very little rainfall, so she gets regular city water, but not that much (neighbors are water-sipping Salvia mellifera, a CA native Salvia cross, and multiple CA native grasses). She is planted near the base and smack in the root zone of an 80+ foot tall ash tree, so the soil is anything but rich (fairly sandy and rocky). On the latest water company annual report the average ph of the water was 7.8 (with a range during the year of 7.3 to 8.5). Rarely have I fertilized this rose, and if I do it is only with fish emulsion diluted to 1/2 strength recommended on the bottle, and she has to share with 4 or 5 other roses a 2-gallon watering can dose among them. RdV grows in England on chalk which is very alkaline and in my garden which is also alkaline. I do realise others are having problems with pale leaves, but perhaps alkalinity is not the problem. If it isn't then all the acid soil amendments and fertilizers won't fix it. And from what I've been reading about what people that do get the pale leaves/pink flowers on their plants is, that those treatments are not successful. That gets me back to the point that maybe the assumption of what the problem is, well, isn't it....See MoreWill Reine des Violettes Succeed Here?
Comments (35)Ingrid, I thought Marchesa was a Portland, too, but HMF, ARE and RVR all list her as HP, so who knows. Whatever she is, I do like her a lot. Buford, IâÂÂve been following your posts about the yard âÂÂdigâ and can imagine itâÂÂs a muddy mess with all these storms. Mine is a gushy nightmare even without being dug up. Thank goodness I havenâÂÂt put out my fall seeds yet or my neighbors downhill would be growing some pretty poppies and stock next year :) And evidently all the work weâÂÂve done to correct the basement flooding issue hasnâÂÂt worked! Our conditions should be about the same, so I think Marchesa would do well for you and maybe a RdV from a different source would do better, as well. Mine from ARE is the thornless one. I top dressed her with manure and mulched with pine straw when I planted her, but havenâÂÂt given her any special treatment. Her foliage has been good, and she has been a better bloomer than I expected for a first year rose with questionable rebloom reports from others. SheâÂÂs not lighting the world on fire with her prolific blooming by any means, but after her spring flush, she has given me a handful of beautiful, smelly purple blooms about once a month. I was worried about planting her in full sun, but didnâÂÂt have a part shade spot available. SheâÂÂs handled the sun just fine and maybe thatâÂÂs what is helping her to rebloom. No radiated heat in her spot like Ingrid has, though, and different soil, plenty of rainfall & humidity that IngridâÂÂs climate doesnâÂÂt give her either....See MoreReine de Violette Color and Bloom Size
Comments (30)That did occur to me also, Christopher. But the description was written by Charles Lemaire, an eminent botanist, who vouches that the illustration is an accurate depiction of the rose. That same illustration is then referred to in the same German publication that says the rose has a red center and no thorns. I think that's weird, but I also think it points to the primary source as being considered reputable. And it seems unlikely to me that the description and illustration would be published without feedback/ correction from the breeder, given that this was a cultivar being advertised for sale for the first time. And the publisher of L'Illustration horticole was also selling the rose- introducing it in Belgium. If you can find a retraction or correction, that would indeed be of interest. But assuming that you doubt the original description, the question is: does the modern version of RdV have a red or crimson center? No- so far as I can see, it has a white or whitish center. So either you go with the very first description and illustration introducing a red-thorned 'RdV' to the world, or you go with the thornless rose with the red or crimson center. Neither of these early descriptions quite fit what is in commerce today. At this point, I'm mostly curious about why RdV disappeared to the point that her absence was lamented in the 1904 Journal des Roses, but she is now one of the more famous of the old rose cultivars. I think it is a false assumption that RdV has been popular and available continuously since her introduction in 1860. I want to search American catalogs (or any catalogs, but I seem to mostly only have access to American ones via the Biodiversity Heritage Library) to see who carried it and when. I know that Peter Henderson Nursery of NYC carried RdV from 1872-1880 (and possibly before, but the earliest catalog I find is 1872). Her absence from other catalogs is remarkable. She is also listed in the 1880 Baudriller catalogue (Angers, France). I'm hoping to get a better feel for who liked her, who sold her, did she really disappear and- if so- when did her 20th C. revival begin, and who began it? If anyone knows of a free online source for old British/European nursery catalogs, I'd appreciate a heads up. Virginia...See MoreRelated Professionals
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