Posts Tagged ‘Roses’

My World # 32

May 19, 2009

RoseCollage090518

This is my post for the My World meme.  It is hosted by Klaus, Ivar, Sandy, Wren, Louise and Fishing Guy.  Last week there were 100 people sharing their worlds.  To see more of our world or to join and share your part of the world, click HERE.

This week my world contains roses!  When we got home from the beach last week we found our first rose in bloom.  Over the course of the week it was joined by five others.  The collage above shows the six roses we have in bloom today.

The nice thing is that we have several more rose bushes with many buds on them.  So hopefully we’ll have many more of these beauties in the days ahead.

My World # 22

March 2, 2009

new-roses

This is my entry for My World.  Last week over 100 people shared views of their part of the world through this meme.  To join, or to see more pictures from around the world, click HERE.

My World today is COLD, and the forecast is that things will stay that way for at least one more day.  I’m ready for the cold weather to end.

In order to have something more pleasant to think about, I experimented with PIcasa, which we have started using with our new computers.  I made the collage above of some of the roses in our yard.  The collage shows Sweet Freedom and Wildfire on the left, Perfect Moment in the middle, Memorial Day on the top right, and Rio Samba and Mister Lincoln on the bottom right.  The picture can be expanded to get a better view.

Hopefully all of these roses will again grace our yard once the weather warms up with their beauty and fragrance.  I can hardly wait.

Do They Know Something I Don’t Know?

February 23, 2009

frontdoorroses

I was surprised to find the box in the picture above leaning against the front door Saturday afternoon.  Betsy and I were busy working with our new computers and we didn’t even hear the mailman come to the front door.

I recognized the box as soon as I saw it — I didn’t even have to read the name.  I’ve been a customer of Jackson & Perkins for many years, and I knew that we had just gotten a bare-root rose which we ordered for our garden this year.  The reason I was surprised is that Jackson & Perkins does a good job of getting roses to the customer at the proper planting time.  And quite frankly, I was expecting to be planting roses anytime soon!

Rose Spellbound, Fairfield Glade.  June, 2006.

Rose Spellbound, Fairfield Glade. June, 2006.

This rose, Spellbound,  is a replacement for a plant we’ve had in our garden.  The picture at the right shows Spellbound in 2006, the year we planted it.  But two years of drought had reduced it to a single blossom on a weak stem last year.  Since we like Spellbound when it’s healthy, we decided to try again with a new plant.

So I was delighted with this sign from Jackson & Perkins that spring is near.  The only problem is that we got the rose Saturday afternoon and it snowed Saturday night!  Oh, well, at least Betsy was happy.

Thoughts of Spring

February 5, 2009
Rio Samba rose in our garden.

Rio Samba rose in our garden.

Betsy and I woke up Wednesday morning to snow and 13° temperatures.  As if that wasn’t bad enough I had to carry wood from the wood pile to the garage since we’ve been going through the wood so fast.

I’m happy to say that we both made it through the day, but I did get to thinking about Spring.  Warm weather . . . green grass . . . flowers!

When we think of flowers Betsy and I most often think of roses.  We’re both a little nuts when it comes to roses — we like them and are always looking for ways to fit just one more rose into our garden.

There are two main attributes of the roses we grow — fragrance and color.  Sometimes we can get both attributes in a single rose such as Double Delight.  At other times we have to settle for one attribute or the other.

Betsy tends to like red roses with large blossoms — Mister Lincoln and Veterans Honor are two of her favorites.  I tend to have many different ‘favorites’ — on any given day my favorite is the rose with the buds that just opened.

The rose above is Rio Samba.  It’s not very fragrant, but it does has some beautiful color.  We added this rose to our garden in 2006, and I can hardly wait to see it again in 2009.

A Glimpse of Spring on a Gloomy Winter Day

January 11, 2009

jacksonperkins

Yesterday was another gray, rainy day here in the Glade.  We had to go out to run a couple of errands, but mostly we stayed in and listened to the rain on the roof.

Fortunately we had a sure cure for a dreary winter day — the garden catalog.  When I was growing up in northern Indiana the winters were rougher than they are here in Tennessee and the garden catalogs were a welcome sign that Spring would eventually arrive.  I grew up on a small farm and we had a fairly large garden.  Mom and Dad would let my brother and me each pick out something to plant.  Oh, how we looked forward to those catalogs.

The garden catalog that brightened our day was the rose catalog from Jackson & Perkins.  J&P always has a beautiful catalog, not to mention beautiful roses.

Although I now get roses from a couple of different sources, I’ve grown Jackson & Perkins roses for over 30 years.  When I lived in North Carolina and Ohio I even grew test roses for J&P, which was a very interesting undertaking.  I would get roses to plant having no idea what they would look like.

I don’t do that any more, but I do still grow roses and wish that I had more room for them.  And I still look through the rose catalogs from cover to cover.

We learned about two new Jackson & Perkins roses last October and I convinced Betsy that we had room for both of them.  But in looking through the catalog yesterday I discovered FOUR new roses that I had never heard about before.

Betsy — we need a larger lot!!!

The Roses Have Been Put to Bed

November 29, 2008
Sweet Freedom Rose, 2008.

Sweet Freedom Rose, 2008.

Today I finished putting the roses to bed for the winter.  We’ve had enough cold weather that they’ve gone dormant and I covered them to help them get through the winter.

To say that I cover the roses is not completely accurate.  What I do is mound compost over the crowns to keep them from freezing.  I have a compost pile on the edge of the rough behind our house to which I add grass clippings, leaves, and other organic material.

I know it’s just my imagination, but the days seem more dreary once the roses have been pruned and covered.  I guess that means that winter is almost here.

But hopefully when spring returns the roses will green up and start growing again.  I posted the rose above as a reminder that spring will return.  That rose is Sweet Freedom, a new rose for us in 2008.

Our Last Roses

November 9, 2008
Glowing Peace and Double Delight Roses.  November 7, 2008.

Glowing Peace and Double Delight Roses. November 7, 2008.

As I mentioned yesterday, we’ve had a cold front move through our area with temperatures down around freezing.  On Friday I brought in what will probably be our last roses of the season, which are shown in the picture above.  The rose on the left is called Glowing Peace, while the rose on the right is my personal favorite, Double Delight.

I think our roses did pretty well this year.  I’m still working on getting the rose beds fixed up properly, but we did have 33 different varieties bloom this year.

We had our first rose bloom on May 9 and that rose was, interestingly enough, Double Delight!  So I guess you could say that Double Delight began and ended our roses this year.  Since it is as fragrant as it is beautiful, I couldn’t think of a more appropriate beginning and ending for the roses this year.

If you would like to see all 33 varieties we had this year, click HERE.

They’re Still Beautiful

October 21, 2008
Love and Peace Rose, Fairfield Glade, October 19, 2008.

Love and Peace Rose, Fairfield Glade, October 19, 2008.

The temperature got down into the mid-thirties Sunday night here on the Plateau.  We had a frost watch here in Cumberland County, but as far as I can tell none of our plants got nipped.

But it definitely feels like autumn.  The days are cool and crisp and it feels good to be out working in the yard, even if we  are having to clean up a lot of leaves now.  Most of the leaves are brown — we still haven’t had a great deal of color around here.

One nice thing is that the roses are still blooming and looking very good.  We now have several in full bloom and more are in bud.  We plan on enjoying them for as long as we can.

Our Roses

October 12, 2008
Our big rose bed.  October 10, 2008.

Our big rose bed. October 10, 2008.

I like roses.  They can be a lot of work, but it is more than worth it.  I enjoy the way rose blossoms change as they age — a bud may  start out mostly yellow and the mature flower is mostly red.

Spring is probably the best season for roses.  They always put on a show with the first blooms of the year.  Things slow down in the summer, especially when the weather is hot and dry, but then pick up again in the fall.

As you can see roses are putting on a pretty good display now.  The rain we had earlier this week and the cooler temperatures have encouraged most of our roses to bloom again.  And yesterday I noticed a nice bonus to the beauty of the roses — a most delightful fragrance every time I went near the roses.

No wonder I enjoy growing roses!

Fickle Betsy

September 27, 2008
Sheer Bliss Rose, Fairfield Glade, Tennessee.  September 24, 2008.

Sheer Bliss Rose, Fairfield Glade, Tennessee. September 24, 2008.

I’m saddened to have to report that I’ve discovered that Betsy is very fickle.  I was hoping against hope that I was wrong, but the truth is undeniable.

The first two years we had roses here in the Glade Betsy declared that her favorite rose was a fragrant red rose named Mister Lincoln.  Every time we got a new rose bud from Mister Lincoln she would ‘ooh-and-aah’ all over it.

But the next two years Betsy said that her favorite rose was Veterans Honor — another red rose.  Veterans Honor has bigger blossoms than Mister Lincoln, but it is not quite as fragrant.  So for two years the ‘oohing-and-aahing’ was over Veterans Honor.  Poor Mister Lincoln!

So what about this year?  Well, Betsy has a new favorite rose — Sheer Bliss (see the photo above).  Sheer Bliss is not red, but it is fragrant.  Sheer Bliss is a new rose for us this year and it gets Betsy’s ‘oohs-and-aahs’.

So you can understand why I think Betsy has been fickle.  But as long as her fickleness applies only to roses and not to men, I guess I shouldn’t complain.