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Jane Zammit
most recent 9 APR 08 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 8 APR 08 by Jane Zammit
Hi good people, hope you can help me ...re my nursery listing for 'roses etcetera':

if 'etcetera' is spelt as one word, those who enter 'et cetera' can't find it, no matter which button they push, i.e. contains, sounds like et al AND vica versa

could I have 2 listings one spelt 'roses et cetera', and another spelt 'roses etcetera' - or is that in the too hard basket?

I've just been testing it trying to sort it out and run into a brick wall - my nursery blog site uses
et cetera, but most people don't notice the subtelty of the space (technically it is 2 words but most write it as one word if they are writing it out in full

many thanks

Jane
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Reply #1 of 1 posted 9 APR 08 by HMF Admin
Two separate listings would be a problem for us but we'll look into an alternate solution.
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most recent 14 MAR 08 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 12 MAR 08 by Pascale Hiemann
I found this rose in southern France. It is once flowering and blooms earlier as all other roses. I think it is a China rose. Can someone help identify it?
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Reply #1 of 11 posted 12 MAR 08 by billy teabag
Is this Indica Major?
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Reply #2 of 11 posted 12 MAR 08 by Pascale Hiemann
I just have compared with other photos of this rose and I think it is very possible and even probably. What typical is for my rose are the darkpink edges. But last year the blooms were more globular (see the 1. Photo) and whithout the pink edges.
Many thanks!
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Reply #3 of 11 posted 12 MAR 08 by billy teabag
Hi Pascale
Your photo of the globular bloom made me a bit uncertain, but the other two looked just like it to my eye. I'll email a couple of friends and ask them to take a look at your photos. Margaret Furness has photographed Indica Major quite a bit and I'm sure she would recognise it at a glance. It was a really popular rootstock in the past, so it's one of those roses that you notice in the springtime when it puts on those lovely blooms and realise just how many plants are surviving in old gardens and on roadside fences.
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Reply #4 of 11 posted 12 MAR 08 by Jane Zammit
Pascale & Billy, I'd say it is a nice indica major seedling, I've got a three forms here and occasionally get that nice globular bloom on a couple of them - depends on the season a bit I think - no doubt I would have some 'matching' photos somewhere in my files - the leaflets look right, and the bud colour, and early season bloom are also typical distinctive characteristics in my experience.
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Reply #6 of 11 posted 12 MAR 08 by Patricia Routley
The leaves look identical to Gwen Fagan's 'Roses at the Cape of Good Hope' picture on p85.
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Reply #5 of 11 posted 12 MAR 08 by Pascale Hiemann
Hi Billy
The globular blooms were an exception last year. Many roses in my garden looked differently. Perhaps because we had a strange springtime: at first it was very hot and after that very rainy; and for the first time they were flowering in May, 3 weeks earlier than the other years.Thanks for your interest.
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Reply #7 of 11 posted 13 MAR 08 by Ozoldroser
The third photo is the atypical picture for me of Rosa indica major and the leaves, buds and that it flowers early points to that - plus the once flowering.
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Reply #8 of 11 posted 13 MAR 08 by Margaret Furness
I've posted a couple more pics of R indica major, one close-up, for you to compare.
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Reply #9 of 11 posted 14 MAR 08 by Pascale Hiemann
I believe it is no doubt, it is Indica Major. Thank you.
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Reply #10 of 11 posted 14 MAR 08 by Cass
Pascale, please post your shots on the Indica Major page. It's found all over the world. Variations in the bloom color, as opposed to the size and look of the plants, confuse rosarians everywhere.
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Reply #11 of 11 posted 14 MAR 08 by Pascale Hiemann
I'll do it. (They are already on my garden page, but whithout a name)
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most recent 14 MAR 08 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 14 MAR 08 by Jane Zammit
Does anyone have photos of an established, healthy plant that shows the overall growth structure of the climbing form of this rose.

If not a description of behaviour would be appreciated.
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most recent 10 MAR 08 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 9 MAR 08 by Unregistered Guest
I was given a cut of what the man called an Indonesian Rose, he said the blooms would change from red to yellow to purple throughout the day. However, I can't find anything matching that name or description. Is this plant for real or was the guy crazy??
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Reply #1 of 1 posted 10 MAR 08 by Jane Zammit
well it might be a description of 'Mutabilis' with both the colour sequence & descriptions a little outside the norm; the closed buds start orange/red, the single blooms open cadmium yellow, turning to pink and closing cerise
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