HelpMeFind Roses, Clematis and Peonies
Roses, Clematis and Peonies
and everything gardening related.
Member
Profile
PhotosFavoritesCommentsJournalCuttings 
TaniaRose
most recent 16 MAY 23 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 20 SEP 21 by TaniaRose
Very pleased with this hardy rose in Maryland, 7b. First season bare root from Palatine. She is in 19'' pot, has grown to a manageable 4.5', and is able to take the heat, humidity, and the rain with no issues. I imagine she could get a little taller if I put her in the ground. Palatine's 2-3' height description is a bit off but they do say it depends where you are growing it so keep that in mind when selecting this rose. What I love about Rosemantic Red most are the blooms which are long lasting. Pretty good black spot resistance but I do spray fungicide so can't comment for non spray gardens.
REPLY
Reply #1 of 1 posted 16 MAY 23 by Markay-MD7
I am in Maryland also and grow Rosemantic Red in my no-spray garden. It does blackspot some and the lover parts of the shrub will defoliate, but overall vigor seems unaffected. It has grown bigger than expected and can easily hit 5’ tall by 3.5 feet wide. It blooms more than any other rose grow.
REPLY
most recent 11 AUG 22 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 11 AUG 22 by TaniaRose
Have her and she is supposed to a low growing shrub but has put out on 7ft cane and a 4ft cane. Has anyone's bush done the same? In Maryland, 7b climate. On own root.
REPLY
most recent 8 DEC 21 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 26 JUL 20 by Jeri Jennings
I haven't seen this mentioned anywhere, so I thought I might, before the comment is "lost" to time and attrition ...

We got our WPIRDM as a cutting from the Sacramento City Cemetery collection, handed to us long ago by the late Barbara Oliva, then Curator of Roses. When she gave it to us, Barbara told us that she was working in the garden one day when a busload of Chinese Tourists arrived to tour. One of the ladies was excited to recognize the rose as one she knew, and told Barbara its' legend.

The name, she said, 'Chi Long Han Zhu' -- White Pearl in Red Dragon's Mouth -- came from a legend of a red dragon who dwelt within the Imperial Palace. At night, the dragon flies out over the Land of China, seeking Virtue.

When he finds it, he takes it back to the Emperor, in the form of a glowing Pearl, held gently in the Dragon's flaming mouth.

And so it has its name. If you look into a freshly-opened bloom, you will see the red of the dragon's in-curving mouth, the flaming yellow stamens, and the white pearl of an "eye" at the center.
REPLY
Reply #1 of 1 posted 8 DEC 21 by TaniaRose
Nice! Thanks for this.
REPLY
most recent 13 OCT 21 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 13 OCT 21 by TaniaRose
Does anyone know the shape of bloom? Mostly solitary I take it?
REPLY
Reply #1 of 1 posted 13 OCT 21 by Give me caffeine
Check the photo, on the first photo page:
Rose photo courtesy of asakombu
Uploaded 8 JAN 20

Shows the whole bush, in bloom.
REPLY
© 2025 HelpMeFind.com