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'Opening Night ™' rose Reviews & Comments
Discussion id : 10-109
most recent 28 JUN SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 23 SEP 05 by Wendy C
Opening Night is one of the best performing reds I have. It responds best to dead heading back to a solid cane, or it will bloom on weak stems. This year both of my plants have had up to 35 blooms each at any given time. Wonderful cut flower.
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Reply #1 of 2 posted 24 JUN by joys of life
Thanks for this tip, I will try this.
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Reply #2 of 2 posted 28 JUN by Michael Garhart
It's a real bloom machine, which makes up for its open bloom form. I have seen a few exhibition quality in early June. Rare, but it happens.
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Discussion id : 167-675
most recent 24 JUN HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 24 JUN by joys of life
I have had the rare thrill only understood by gardeners, when I split a large mystery rose I inherited when I purchased my house in two and discovered the original metal plant tag with it's name in between the two pieces!
Turns out this is the rose I have!

I've been trying to cultivate her for 3 years now, with difficulty. The stems are very rigid and upright and the habit is very bushy, with leaf bunches coming right off main stems. Hard to work with without getting scratched, and the density of the foliage makes a wonderful home for insects.

As you'd suspect, she's a total disease and insect magnet; black spot, aphids, thrips, slugs, she has them all, usually at the same time. She's always a mess by the end of June. Defoliating helps somewhat. This rose is growing on the south side of my house, sheltered by an overhang, but still covered in blackspot.

The flowers are thick-petalled, velvety and ruffled, and given singly, borne on long, upright stems. They have a moderate fruity fragrance and are a lovely pure red color with small golden stamens. This looks like it's bred to be a long stemmed rose in a vase.

Comparing her to my other 15 roses, she takes the most work. I did get a nice flush in the spring last year, when I did not prune her at all (although got a puny yield this year for some reason). She has reached about 8 feet at this point and I'm thinking of pruning her all the way down (it's the end of June). Is that a good idea?

Edit: This rose LOVES to have wet roots.
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Discussion id : 71-277
most recent 27 APR 15 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 29 APR 13 by Benaminh
I am trying to decide between Opening Night and Cesar Chavez (AKA Beloved). They have the same parentage. For those that have grown both, please tell me what the differences are between the two, is one better than the other? The ones I have seen late in the season at municipal gardens have not made an impression. For what it's worth, I prefer Oklahoma over Mr. Lincoln and am giving Papa Meilland another chance before the shovel. Many thanks.
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Reply #1 of 3 posted 16 JUN 13 by bluebuster77
I would say Opening Night. I prefers which one is disease resistant, better bloom form, frangrant (some say true rose must have fragrance), and do well in your zone. Also I consider AARS rating and/or AARS award, plus HMF members favorite.
I picked my roses base on three or more above characteristics. Speaking of red rose, I collected Kardinal85, Love's Magic, Ingrid Bergman, Olympaid, Firefighter, Barkarole, Veteran's Honor and I really want Black Magic-Not recently sold in US. And
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Reply #2 of 3 posted 27 JUN 13 by Dianne's Southwest Idaho Rose Garden
Beloved is another offspring of Olympiad and Ingrid Bergman, and I like it MUCH better than Opening Night. Living in a dry climate where blackspot isn't a major problem, I can't speak for its disease-resistance qualities, however..
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Reply #3 of 3 posted 27 APR 15 by Michael Garhart
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Discussion id : 72-627
most recent 27 JUN 13 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 27 JUN 13 by Dianne's Southwest Idaho Rose Garden
This rose is beautifully colored, but I don't like it nearly as much as I do either of its parents (Olympiad & Ingrid Bergman, both superior reds). It shows its stamens through most of its bloom time. While some people don't mind that, for me a rose with visible stamens early needs to smell wonderful to compensate!
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