@Yviestevie ...oh in that case you will have to do something about it.. as you will get rose replant disease if you don't..
...the simplest way is to sprinkle mycorrhizal fungi all over the roots of the new rose with some at the base of the planting hole, according to instructions on the packet.. it will also help if you can remove some of the soil and replace with fresh from elsewhere in the garden where no rose, bramble, apple tree, pyracantha etc. has been growing..
...if using the fungi, do not apply manure or FBB [in the planting hole - it's ok on the surface]... as it interferes with it.. if you do not use the fungi, then some replacement of soil will be necessary... there is a cardboard box method but I can't be doing with it personally..
@Marlorena I do love Blush Noisette and the history bit of it. On my waiting list. Cannot have any climbers for now. Only thing that puts me off the old garden roses are their repeat flowering characteristics. But that's part of their ancestry/ History isn't it. Either love it or hate it.
@Marlorena I think it is one of Style's exclusive roses and they've been very slow with listing their new roses on HMF and don't always have the breeder's code on the website. I think it is 2020 rose. I'll try to message them and ask But I don't think it is suspicious. Notice the occasional bright pink parts of flowers, that's quite unique, I hope it isn't an unstable sport of something pink.
I see that David Austin are discontinuing Graham Thomas and Abraham Derby in the US, I see they both are out of stock of both bare root and potted on the UK site, I wonder if that means they will soon no longer available in the UK/EU either. Has anyone heard?
Mountainous Northern Catalunya, Spain. Hot summers, cold winters.
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..if you want a cane to break from low down, it's worth a try.. and the notch does not need to be half as ugly as I've made it to be..
...oh in that case you will have to do something about it.. as you will get rose replant disease if you don't..
...the simplest way is to sprinkle mycorrhizal fungi all over the roots of the new rose with some at the base of the planting hole, according to instructions on the packet.. it will also help if you can remove some of the soil and replace with fresh from elsewhere in the garden where no rose, bramble, apple tree, pyracantha etc. has been growing..
...if using the fungi, do not apply manure or FBB [in the planting hole - it's ok on the surface]... as it interferes with it.. if you do not use the fungi, then some replacement of soil will be necessary... there is a cardboard box method but I can't be doing with it personally..
But I don't think it is suspicious. Notice the occasional bright pink parts of flowers, that's quite unique, I hope it isn't an unstable sport of something pink.
https://www.cantsroses.co.uk/roses/old-fashioned-roses/english-roses/