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'Honky Tonk Blues' rose Reviews & Comments
Discussion id : 173-215
most recent 2 days ago SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 6 JUL by Louis Galarneau
I had two beautiful one and lost the two of them this year from dye back ! " Did this happen to someone else with that rose ?
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Reply #1 of 6 posted 14 days ago by Louis Galarneau
Bought a new one to replace my two... Than What !! It is starting o have dye back !! What is happening with that rose!!!
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Reply #2 of 6 posted 7 days ago by eihblin
Louis ,I posted a reply to your post, but forgot to hit the "reply" button!
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Reply #3 of 6 posted 7 days ago by eihblin
My first comment does not seem to have been posted, so I'll write it again.
These last few years I've been having problems with die-back on several of my new implants (that is, roses I planted out last fall,which is the proper time here in Italy). They look fine until the end of July, and then suddenly this thing that some people call the "creeping black finger of death" shows up. A black blotch appears at the base of a main cane (the laterals don't show this) , and when I cut it off, it is obvious that the cane is basically dead, since it's completely brown inside. This year this began early, in July, and Pacific Dream was one that got it-it's now reduced to only one cane. I assume this is canker,and I'm guessing that it may be caused by temperature swings-extreme heat for a month or so, followed by the arrival of a cold front that is strong enough to reach the Italian peninsula. The fact is that we had a horrendous month of June, and then it suddenly turned "normal" (well, what used to be "normal" 25 years ago). I myself seem to get sick when this happens , a sort of virusy-type sindrome. Maybe this makes roses get sick too? What is your climate like? Is this the kind of die-back you are experiencing?
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Reply #4 of 6 posted 6 days ago by Louis Galarneau
thanks eihblin for your reply . I live in quebec canada , which is. bit cooler than Italy . But I keep all my roses in pots and in an heated garage for the winter so I can keep roses that would not be able to go through our very cold winter . What my blue for you rose went through look like the symptoms you describe , But the brown spots can start anywhere on the canes . Then the brown spot enlarge and the cane finished by dying . I just succeeded to save one of my blue for you rose by removing all the canes that had brown spot and were kind of unrecuperable and removed with a very sharp knife the brown section on each of the other canes that were less affected ... the cancer seams to have stop on this one that I did that . This happen only to my blue for you roses ... even the brand new one .. all my other roses ( around 70 ) are in full shape . Thanks again for your reply ...
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Reply #5 of 6 posted 3 days ago by eihblin
Louis, I couldn't reply before because this site was not working for me.When during the year did the black stuff start appearing on your Blue for You rose? Your conditions seem to be so different from mine; it doesn't sound like yours have to endure wild temperature swings or intense heat ,etc, all of which I theorized as being causes for this unpleasant phenomenon in my own garden. This is so frustrating!
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Reply #6 of 6 posted 2 days ago by Louis Galarneau
Me too I have problem to link to the site . It seems that to many people are using it at the same time .... Sometime I can go in the site for few minutes and then I can't for hours ...
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Discussion id : 128-297
most recent 7 days ago SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 27 JUN 21 by christineb
Is there an error in the height listed? I believe this is considered a short rose, under 2'.
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Reply #1 of 6 posted 27 JUN 21 by jedmar
While European nurseries give the height of 'Blue for You' as 90-100 cm, in Australia it seems to attain 150-200 cm. Who knows why' Different understock, climate?
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Reply #2 of 6 posted 27 JUN 21 by christineb
English nurseries list the height as 60-90cm, and that is my experience here, so even smaller!
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Reply #3 of 6 posted 28 JUN 21 by Plazbo
I assume mostly just the longer growing season. Middle of winter now (and the winter solstice just the other day so days are technically getting more daylight) and many moderns (and china's and polyantha's) like Blue For You are still sending out the occasional flower.
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Reply #4 of 6 posted 29 JUN 21 by Kathy Strong
Blue for You gets to about four feet in San Diego, growing year round.
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Reply #5 of 6 posted 15 NOV 23 by Clairose
Yes in Australia mine reached 2.5 mtr high. Very upright strong growth. Does not like heavy pruning.
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Reply #6 of 6 posted 7 days ago by eihblin
Italian nurseries list it as only growing to be from 50-80 cms, and this is most certainly a warm climate with a long growing season!
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Discussion id : 167-109
most recent 9 MAY 24 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 9 MAY 24 by Unregistered Guest
Available from - Burlington roses
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Discussion id : 133-738
most recent 14 JUL 22 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 14 JUL 22 by fogplants
Are there any locations in the US which have this available? I'm interested in getting one, but I'm not having any luck.
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