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cafeaulait
most recent 1 OCT SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 20 JAN 14 by Michael Garhart
Wow. The form on this one is really cool.
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Reply #1 of 4 posted 14 JUL 14 by cafeaulait
I hope someone brings this one to the US soon! Wow is right :)
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Reply #2 of 4 posted 1 OCT by jmile
It is in the US. I purchased this rose last year in the US. It was one of the few roses that did well in a pot during last year's extremely hot summer. Apparently loves heat.
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Reply #3 of 4 posted 1 OCT by Nastarana
May I ask where you purchased it? Does it have a different name in the US?
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Reply #4 of 4 posted 1 OCT by jmile
It has the same name here in the Us. I purchased it from a small nursery on Etsy named RoseFlowerWorld. It is one of the few potted roses that survived the heat.
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most recent 23 JUN 23 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 26 SEP 13 by cafeaulait
Love, love, love her! In my NCz7b climate, she's a winner. The first year or so she had small blooms that were just cute, but she really comes into her own with age. It's funny to see bloom size change so much.

She's vigorous, spreading, and the blooms are just lovely. She is what the great pictures of Austins try to capture.

She's not continuously blooming, and until she gets mature she may have spurts of growth instead of repeat. Mine's 3 or 4 years old and wonderful now :) She only gets Blackspot very rarely in my no-spray garden. It goes away quickly, so I never worry about her.
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Reply #1 of 3 posted 13 NOV 16 by modestgoddess
Hello I'm in zone 7 Maryland. Can you tell me how large your Cinderella is and if it is own root or grafted? Thanks
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Reply #2 of 3 posted 8 SEP 20 by myd
Im in zone 7b in Maryland. I have Cinderella fairytale in a large pot. I have had it for 3 years. I got it from Palantine roses so it is grafted. It is about 4 feet tall (above the pot). I haven't planted it in the ground yet due to voles.
I have sprayed it with neem oil (I have been inconsistent with this), but I think I will stop spraying it with neem oil. The neem oil gets rid of the aphids in the spring, but in the summer this rose gets thrips. The thrips really affected a large flush of blooms this summer. I read that spraying for aphids in the spring means that beneficial insects who eat aphids will not come to the plant and those same insects eat the thrips later in the summer, or something along those lines. I am also going to plant more native perennials in order to attract said beneficial bugs.
This rose bush is very healthy. It has formed a very attractive shape. It's sturdy and holds the flowers upright. Also, the flowers last a long time. The flowers are beautiful. It has a large flush in spring and several smaller flushes afterwards. It looks very nice both close up and far away. Right now half of the bush is getting more shade, and that side blooms about half as much as the side in the sun. Consequently, I am going to move it completely into the sun. It has periods of times between flushes with no flowers on the bush.
I fertilize it with a diluted liquid fertilizer- either neptune's harvest, fox farm, or compost tea - at least 2 times a week. I water it every day during summer because it is in a pot. After a rainy period some of the leaves look yellowish, but I think this is because the rain washes the nutrients out of the pot. I never let water get on the leaves when watering it.
This rose has never had an outbreak of blackspot or any other disease. The main problem I have is with the sawfly larvae. I pick them off by hand every so often and that seems to keep it under control.
The fragrance of this rose is like a green apple. It's not a strong fragrance and not a distinguishing feature of this rose.
I think this rose would definitely prefer to be in the ground because it keeps sending roots out of the pot into the ground. I've read about planting a rose in a large growers pot with several holes in the bottom, and keeping the top of the pot a few inches above ground in order to keep the voles out. I think I may try that next spring.
6/24/2021- This rose continues to not succumb to blackspot or any other disease. However, I still have not been able to put it into the ground, and I think it is suffering in the pot because it is not very vigorous at all and is very slow to repeat this year.
8/2024- I had to give this rose away because it has a ton of thorns and I am on a blood-thinner and a few times my thorny roses hooked into my arm- through the clothes- and caused serious damage to me. So alas, the thorny roses are all now with my friends and I go and visit them. And this rose- wow, it is in the ground next to a trellis which it just sort of grows around and through (it is not trained to it) and my friend is way too busy to baby roses- this rose is a rockstar! So beautiful, the blooms are incredible. It just puts out massive branches full of gorgeous blooms. Still disease free in the mid-atlantic! Wow.
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Reply #3 of 3 posted 23 JUN 23 by ms_margaret
Mine is own root from Angel gardens. I've had it for probably 10 years. Given a good location, this rose can get 6' wide in the Southeastern United States. The bush is so graceful. It truly looks like a fairy tale.

At first I was wondering why it didn't have the globular blooms in others' photos. It takes time. She likes afternoon sun in Atlanta.

Don't plant her next to a sidewalk like I did. Bad idea. She's now huge and I don't think I'm going to move her. It would probably be easier to move the sidewalk.
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most recent 2 JUN 17 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 26 SEP 13 by cafeaulait
I'm surprised at Jasmina. I wanted her for years. I have one, a sturdy own root, and she's only been in my garden one long season (fall planted the year before).

But her foliage is not as clean as I'd expect from a modern Kordes rose. She gets a lot of Blackspot so far. Her vigor has not been great, either. I have her in a hot site with fairly difficult soil that can dry out, so maybe she just needs more pampering. Maybe she just needs to grow up?

I'm not rating her yet, but I just wanted to give a possible heads up to folks. She may not be a terribly easy rose like some are. Most Kordes are so simple here!
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Reply #1 of 2 posted 26 SEP 13 by Kim Rupert
I think your clues are "hot site", "difficult soil" and the fact many climbers require three years (or longer) to come into their own. Before you're going to get growth and flowers, they require roots under them. Hot, dry, difficult soil issue inhibit root formation. Few roots means few nutrients which can lead to malnourished plants. Under nourished and water stressed plants routinely suffer disease issues. It can be extreme enough to force otherwise bullet proof roses to become infected. I'd suggest doing whatever you can to alleviate the heat, dry and "bad soil" issues the rose is experiencing and then give it three years (at least, perhaps longer if the difficulties it experiences can't be fixed) to perform as expected.
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Reply #2 of 2 posted 2 JUN 17 by buckeyesouth
Grows vigorously here, and it requires a lot of pruning. Balls badly and clusters are so heavy they droop. In perfect weather (not humid, not too hot, not damp), it is a spectacle.
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most recent 16 MAY 16 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 16 MAY 16 by cafeaulait
A similar color to Parade, but a bit more red and not ever hot pink here in NC. It's more like a bright deep rose than red, so I can fit it in better with all the various pinks I love. Blooms themselves last a very long time on the bush and stay fresh. I like her a lot (the not-quite-red color is unusual and very useful in my garden). Mine is completely hardy in z7, when I do have hardiness issues in very bad winters on several roses. Gets some blackspot here at times but can shrug it off, so I don't spray her.
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