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bob diller
most recent 7 MAR 10 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 17 NOV 07 by bob diller
This rose was new for me this spring (2007). I planted 3 in April here in Richmond Virginia, zone 7 and I grow my roses with no chemical sprays for disease and fertilize organically with fish emulsion. It is now Nov 17 and there are still blooms on Jeri Jennings and it has remained nearly black spot free (yes, if you search you find a few dots of black spot, but they never really took hold and spread, but searching Knock Out also turns up a few dots as well, so Jeri is stacking up well against other roses I use as a benchmark for disease resistance/tolerance such as Meidiland Alba, Knock Out, and all my wichuriana ramblers). Jeri Jennings has bloomed in flushes about 6 weeks apart in clusters of 3-5 blooms all season and has so far grown in a nice weeping fountain shape that is classic to the hybrid musk class. I do detect a soft sweet fragrance to her blooms with some fruity undertones. The flowers have so far been about 2 inches across and open a nice rich egg yolk yellow and fade very pleasingly over days to a soft buttery cream color. When all the colors are present in a cluster of blooms, it is lovely. I grow a broad selection of hybrid musk roses and I think she may end up ranking up in my top 5 favorites along with Penelope, Belinda, Ballerina, Marjorie Fair and Windchimes. I'll report back on her performance in 2008 after I see how she does when more established.

Bob Diller
Richmond VA, USA zone 7
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Reply #1 of 4 posted 2 MAY 08 by Karen
Is this a cutting rose?
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Reply #2 of 4 posted 2 MAY 08 by bob diller
It has stems long enough for a little vase of about 4-5 inches. It is cluster flowered and very beautiful, but even roses with short little stems can be floated in a decorative bowl.
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Reply #3 of 4 posted 16 FEB 09 by Paul Barden
Not really, unless you can make use of bloom spikes between 4 and 6 inches long. Good for a "plonk" but not for a typical large arrangement.
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Reply #4 of 4 posted 7 MAR 10 by Mellifera
Hey Bob,

How's your Jeri Jennings doing? I was just wondering how she's holding up in a no spray garden, after having been pointed in her direction by some nice folks on GardenWeb.
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most recent 31 MAY 08 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 18 SEP 07 by Unregistered Guest
This rose is on its second year for me here in Richmond Virginia. It has finally started putting out amazingly long canes that I've tied along a wooden post fence. It seems to be hitting its stride. It has been a shy bloomer so far, but I think as it establishes and sizes up over the years that it may bloom more heavily. So far I've had horrible luck finding yellow roses that are disease resistant here in the steamy southeast US, but this one has remained spotless and healthy.
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Reply #1 of 4 posted 19 SEP 07 by HMF Admin
Thanks for sharing your experience with HelpMeFind.
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Reply #2 of 4 posted 26 SEP 07 by Unregistered Guest
Thanks for your comments on Golden Threshold, a rose we bred. Yes it does take sometime to get going. We find that if we tie down the canes horizontally to the fence and allow new stems to grow upright on the main canes, , you get many more blooms. It is a continuous blooming variety.
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Reply #3 of 4 posted 31 MAY 08 by bob diller
I've tried adding a new picture of this rose, but I've uploaded it twice with seeming success, but it has yet to appear here . This rose bloomed very well this spring 2008. The blooms open a deep sunshine yellow and mellow over a couple weeks to a butter cream color, and the red stamens are very showy. The petals are surprisingly thick and waxy feeling to the touch and smell softly of lemon, like a southern magnolia does. It is putting up some crazy new cames that are thick and stiff and look like they will be difficult to bend and train. It also looks like I've got a monster on my hands, as I think this rose is going to turn out to be utterly huge!
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Reply #4 of 4 posted 31 MAY 08 by HMF Admin
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