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'Tropicana' rose Reviews & Comments
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Initial post
9 AUG 13 by
goncmg
I GIVE UP. Period and case closed. Blind shoots and now, yes, thick fluffy whipped cream MILDEW on the 2 Tropicanas and pretty much on nothing else.............I bought body bags, they were coddled and they GREW...........oh basal after basal, blind leading the blind.....I will forever salivate over the huge plants of this one, growing in total abandon by tenants renting the house, by the fast food purveyor, the shopping mall.................but although I guess I can GROW it, I simply cannot make Tropicana PERFORM for me............I have a blackspot free Soleil d'Or here in swampy summer Columbus, a Futura band that is 3 years old and is now 5 tall x 4 wide---literally a beast of a plant, Smoky and Vesper and Joseph's Coat are disease free, my 6 year old potted and coddled Double Delight is giving me fat basals out of the crusty old union, Mint Julep is a weed, Mojave gave me close to an exhibition bloom, 1839 Tea SAFRANO has NO disease at all and is shooting huge plum colored juicy stems packed with buds, Orange Parfait BLOOMS!!!! LOL LOL.............nothing else I can try, do or say! I do not speak African Violet, I do not speak Tulip and I think it is now proven once and for all I DO NOT SPEAK TROPICANA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Its plausible that you have a mutation. Its not uncommon for graftings to be taken from mutated plants.
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This is the most HILARIOUS lovely rant of a post, LOL I DO NOT SPEAK TROPICANA!! Thank you for a wonderful mid-afternoon chuckle...
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MY TROPICANA REHAB STORY: My elderly neighbor Jose had a neglected rose in the front corner of the property, sad and half dead looking; it had barely bloomed the past several years beyond a smattering in the spring, even though it had in ground irrigation. A close inspection revealed a stunted, almost lifeless bush with a ton of dead wood, and some dull listless leaves, suffocating under hot gravel. NO buds or blooms. A tag caught my eye and I dug it out of the gravel: Tropicana. I told Jose we would try to bring the bush back to life, and he was game.
PROCEDURE: We scraped back the gravel to find that the root zone was covered by weed barrier plastic up to the bud union, with a small opening under the irrigation emitter; that thing was suffocating, and only getting water in a tiny area of the root zone. We started by cutting the plastic away to form a large circle around the bush. Then a pruning to remove dead wood and reduce the worst parts of the existing canes. Next was rose fertilizer granules, and lots of compost and topsoil, topped off by mulch. A deep watering soaked the entire zone, then the next day I came back with a 2 gallon watering can with fish emulsion and root stimulator solution, drenching the now moist root zone. We were still in the mid- high 90's, so I soaked the rose every 2-3 days, concentrating on the area where the irrigation did not reach. Almost immediately, the bush responded. Over the following weeks, it took on a healthier color, and new leafy growth gradually populated the formerly withered canes. The newest cane on the bush elongated and started to bud, gradually followed by the rest of the plant. About 6 weeks later, a first bloom appeared, quite small, but brightly colored, followed by a couple more. Now it is in the beginning of a fall flush, with 6 large flowers, and several more fat buds. SUCCESS!
PS: In addition to the initial fertilization, I gave it a couple of watering cans of more fish emulsion and some Miracle Gro rose food, spaced at 3 week intervals, and kept soaking the root zone every 2-3 days, as the NM fall weather was warm. The whole procedure took about 10 weeks, door to door. Neighbor Jose is ecstatic, and is looking forward to renewed enjoyment of his rose bush. Albuquerque NM, Zone 7A, Hot and Dry, No Spray. ***SEE 3 PICS POSTED ON Oct. 24 2023 FOR THE TRANSFORMATION***
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Tropicana is still loaded in blooms after an extended period of 110 temperatures (not including the heat index). I don't know if it's the weather because she's new here, but she's been a lovely shade of peach, rather than the orange I see in so many pictures. Completely clean foliage and growing like a weed. Fragrant Cloud beside her does have a stronger fragrance and less fading, but a significantly smaller number of blooms.
Own-root, southern hot and humid Z8, full sun, daily overhead watering, sandy soil. So far, no sign of mildew!
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Yes. Colors get rather pale with high heat.
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Was introduced in the UK by the Wheatcroft Brothers in 1961.
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