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Jay-Jay
most recent 9 MAR SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 17 DEC 22 by MiGreenThumb
Mermaid does not have red or burgundy stamens. This rose appears to be 'Golden Wings'; regardless of whatever label may state.
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Reply #1 of 3 posted 17 DEC 22 by Jay-Jay
You mean stamens, I believe. I agree, this can't be Mermaid...
And it is definitely not Meermaid with double ee from Geschwind too.
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Reply #3 of 3 posted 9 MAR by MiGreenThumb
Yes sir, my apologies.
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Reply #2 of 3 posted 18 DEC 22 by HMF Admin
Posts like this demonstrate the advantage of a mutable resource like HMF.
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most recent 19 FEB SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 26 JUN 23 by Margaret Furness
This seems an unusual colour for Aloha. Has it had more typical blooms in the past?
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Reply #1 of 8 posted 26 JUN 23 by Lee H.
Maybe more like one of its sports, Lady Ashe or Dixieland Linda.
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Reply #2 of 8 posted 26 JUN 23 by Jay-Jay
I would say none of the three mentioned roses. Bloom-form doesn't match.
I would suggest a mix-up.
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Reply #3 of 8 posted 18 FEB by Michael Garhart
Maybe its the 2nd McGredy variant.
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Reply #4 of 8 posted 18 FEB by Nastarana
HMF has "Dixieland Linda" and "Lady Ashe" as two names for the same rose. Are there in fact two sports in commerce?
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Reply #5 of 8 posted 18 FEB by Jay-Jay
Maybe Huyustus can shine his light on this?

The photo reminded me a lot of Mainzer Fastnacht also known as Blue Moon... or Sissi.
Under the last name Huyustus posted a month earlier some photo's on HMF.
Only the date is stated, not where the photo was taken.
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Reply #7 of 8 posted 19 FEB by Michael Garhart
McGredy had a mauve called 'Aloha', but because it doesn't have a public photo, and we are not sure if it went anywhere commercially, its a real long shot.
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Reply #8 of 8 posted 19 FEB by Margaret Furness
It would fit the colour of the photo in question, though.
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Reply #6 of 8 posted 19 FEB by jedmar
The name 'Lady Ashe' was added in 2012 as a synonym used by Greenheart Farms.
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most recent 4 FEB SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 22 OCT 17 by NikosR
Is Albertine self cleaning or does it hold on its wasted blooms for the rest of the year? This is important to know for rampant ramblers like this if one does not feel deadheading a large rambler under the heat is an enjoyable passtime.
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Reply #1 of 11 posted 22 OCT 17 by Patricia Routley
The 2011 reference says:
" Later the bloom dies most ungracefully and hangs on to its dead petals. Not in a spreading way, but losing all oomph in the petal and just collapsing to hang like a wet dishcloth in the middle of the pretty cluster."

Nevertheless, I would not be without it.
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Reply #6 of 11 posted 24 OCT 17 by Jay-Jay
On this part (Albertine is a triploid and sets no hips) of what You wrote in that article, I have to respectfully disagree as for setting hips... for it sets quite a few hips. See attached photo's I made today. Sorry for the less sharp photo's, for the light-conditions were bad and I didn't have a steady stand and or hand.
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Reply #7 of 11 posted 24 OCT 17 by Patricia Routley
That is so interesting Jay-Jay. You certainly have many hips there.
I've double checked where that information came from and it was G. D. Rowley, writing in the 1960 American Rose Annual, page 110 on Triploid Garden Roses. Among the other Wichuraiana roses he mentioned in the article were 'American Pillar', Dr. W. van Fleet', 'New Dawn', 'Albertine' and 'Emily Gray'.

I actually do have a photo of a miserable hip or two on 'American Pillar' and will add that to its file.
Perhaps it may be that a hip may not signify fertility? But I will be watching my 'Albertine' for hips this year.
Patricia
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Reply #8 of 11 posted 24 OCT 17 by Jay-Jay
Maybe it needs our weather?
On the other hand, this year was exceptionally sunny and dry over here.
I'll harvest the hips and sow some seeds.
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Reply #10 of 11 posted 26 OCT 17 by NikosR
Being triploid discourages seed fertility, not necessarily hip setting. Hip setting is very much affected by the existence of well developed reproductive organs on the flower.
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Reply #2 of 11 posted 23 OCT 17 by Jay-Jay
The dead flowers hang for a while, but after a while, when the hips swell, the petals disappear. But maybe that was due to a lot of rain and wind.
Will observe this next year.
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Reply #3 of 11 posted 23 OCT 17 by Andrew from Dolton
If you blast the bush with a leaf blower it will remove a lot of the dead flowers. This also works quite well for Camellias.
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Reply #4 of 11 posted 24 OCT 17 by Margaret Furness
Interesting thought. Someone advised me to deadhead a "ground-cover" rose with a golf-club.
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Reply #5 of 11 posted 24 OCT 17 by Jay-Jay
hole in one!
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Reply #9 of 11 posted 26 OCT 17 by Puns 'n' Roses
I can frequently be seen beating my monstrous Christine Helene with a long stick. I don't know what the neighbours think, and I don't actually care - by this I get rid of all the wilted petals without deadheading. And Christine Helene has hundreds of blooms. While hips form on the beaten part, she makes new trusses on new canes. So that's my low-tech recommendation, beat it with a stick. Love the golf club tip as well.
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Reply #11 of 11 posted 4 FEB by PepperReed
I would have never thought about this tip (and the leaf blower) as a way to deal with dead flower petals as an alternative to deadheading a massive prickly shrub. I've avoided getting some of the larger gorgeous roses, because of the deadheading task, so Thank you!
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most recent 22 JAN HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 21 JAN by Callimarcio
The name is 'Ambroise Paré', not 'Ambrose'...a tiny mispelling I guess...
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Reply #1 of 3 posted 21 JAN by Jay-Jay
Misspelling You mean... or was that a pun?
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Reply #2 of 3 posted 21 JAN by Callimarcio
oups, I misspelled with the missing "s"... :p
Thanks
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Reply #3 of 3 posted 22 JAN by jedmar
We usually list different spellings found in literature in order to enable the search function in all cases. "Ambrose" is moved to hidden listing, so that "Ambroise" appears alone.
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