Thursday, April 19, 2007

Voles!



Voles took up residence in my winter protection trench this past winter. I know this not only from the damage they caused to my rose canes but also because I saw one scurry away when I was excavating my roses this week. I think these two will recover from this severe pruning during their winter dormancy.

Friday, April 6, 2007

St. Paul, MN rose convention

If you are interested in learning about growing roses in the upper midwest, mark your calendar for Saturday June 28. This event happens about once every 10 years.
http://twincitiesrose.org/2007convention/artwork/BeginningRoseGrowing.pdf

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

April- Is it spring yet?



Look closely and you will se the first signs of life in my garden. Even if we have more snow or below freezing temps, these reliable minor bulbs are showing their enthusiasm for spring. April is a fickle month here. We are ready to get out and do something but this year, the weather is too cold and wet.

Friday, March 2, 2007

A snowy day in March!




It's a snow day today and the livin' is easy. Until today we were having moisture deficit. But all that has changed in the past 10 days.



You can see a Canadian shrub rose and the top of my Carrier AC unit in the lower right corner.

The photo on the right is 'William Baffin' beyond the snow on my deck.

The photo on the left is my garden under snow.


Monday, February 19, 2007

ARS 2007 Spring national convention

Some readers may know that the Twin Cities Rose Club is sponsoring the Spring 2007 ARS national convention June 28- July 02. It is truly amazing how a dedicated group of rose growers can pull an event like this off. I have been very busy putting together a Power Point presentation for publicity for the convention. (That keeps me busy while there is still snow on the ground and the roses are dormant!) If you would like a CD copy of this P pt, contact me with your address and I will mail one to you.

Sunday, February 4, 2007

The Arctic Blast of the present

Minus 17 overnight and they say tonight will be even colder. How do these roses survive the weather? How do the people survive the weather? The wind is the worst part about the weather.

Saturday, January 27, 2007

Northern Gardener magazine writer visits today!

The winds were howling and the temps were in the single digits when Eric Johnson arrived at my doorstep today. Eric is the author who was assigned to do an article about me and my rose growing in Minnesota. I shared my favorite varieties and tips for growing roses in the North. The article is scheduled for the May-June edition of the Northern Gardener magazine.

Monday, January 22, 2007

A History of the Fragrant Rose

This is another book I finished reading this week, it is by Allen Patterson. It was published in Great Britain in 2004. This book has reproductions of many engravings and paintings that compliment the text. The author covers topics with chapter titles named" Rosa Mundi: roses in the Medieval World, The Wild Rose Tamed, and The Rose Consumed"to name only a few. The final chapter is titled" The Making of 'Peace' : the biography of a rose." I learned several interesting thing from this book but my favorite has an illustration of how the sepals are arranged in the unopened bud of R. canina. I will have to scan the illustration so you can see it also. It is explained by Professor W. T. Stearn in the title 'The Five brethren of the rose: an old botanical riddle'

In a summer's day, in sultry weather
Five brethren were born together
Two had beards and two had none
And the other had half of one.

Winter reading

The past few weeks I have been rose gardening through books from the Hennepin County library. One that I especially enjoyed is R is for ROSE by Carolyn Parker. Carolyn, the author and illustrator, took the letters of the alphabet and expanded it to a 208 page manuscript that I did not want to end. Each rose from Alba, rosa rugosa to Zephirine Drouhin has personal photos and comments about the rose. The book demonstrates Carolyns' artistic photographic ability and success as a rosarian and a rose arranger. You can tell by the quality of the photographs that this book was written over several growing seasons. It was published in 2005 and is a book that I want to add to my personal library.

Saturday, January 13, 2007

We knew it would get cold again

One degree. Five degrees. Wild weather swings. All perfectly normal and expected for this time of year, I guess. Last night my friends at the Twin Cities Rose Club gathered for our monthly meeting to hear Kim, one of our members who is a chemistry teacher at Centruy College, talk about the Chemistry of Roses. I am not a science person, but I enjoyed learning the basics and seeing the beautiful roses that were alternated with important facts about chemistry. This time of year here, it is fun just to get together with other rose growers, enjoy the photos from last summer's gardens and dream about the next season. What else can a rose gardener do when the weather is five degrees?

Sunday, January 7, 2007

As The Tumor Turns

As The Tumor Turns

This crazy weather has me worried

50 degrees, 30 degrees, 40 degrees now predicted10 degrees. This is a recipe for disaster when it comes to long term survival of the tender roses in my garden. It's times like this when I wonder why I try to grow tender roses in a climate where roses do not want to survive. I do all the heroic things to increase their chances for survival, then nature throws in wild swings of temperature that you try to plan for. Time will tell the effects of such variations.

Friday, January 5, 2007

Global warming or just a warm cycle?

The ground is not frozen today on January 5 and the weather feels like early March. This should be the coldest part of the year and we have a range between 30-45 degrees. It will be interesting to see the impact this weather has on the roses. Glossy rose catalogs arrive on a daily basis now to tempt the color starved eye. I know I will purchase too many and expand the collection again in 2007.

Tuesday, January 2, 2007

Where is a coyote when you need one?















This is not a good sign.
Freshly fallen snow, the first of the season that has been a drought year and what do I see? Upon closer inspection I noticed that the critter has been munching on my prized roses. The bush on the right is a "tasty" Canadian shrub rose 'John Davis'. You can even see the droppings if you look closely! :-(


Most of my roses are either buried or somewhat protected from the invasion of the winter rabbits. These plastic collars are filled with bagged top soil that I bought on clearance for 99 cents a bag. I do this to protect the plants from the quick change of the freeze/thaw cycle. I think it really works. I put the collars up when the ground begins to freeze and then fill them so the added soil will also freeze quickly. The white color reflects the sun seems to lessen the damaging effects of the January thaw.

New Year, New Dreams

With snow on the ground and freezing temperatures outside, one might wonder why I am thinking about rose gardening at this time. Because I have time to think and rose gardening it is my passion. I tend to about 150 roses and I am planning to expand that number by at least 40 or 50 more this year.