Showing posts with label 365 project 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 365 project 2011. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Rose Hips - What Now?

No, seriously. What do I do now?

Rose Hips on 365 Project

I have heard you can start roses from seeds but have never heard the step-by-step process. I know the seeds will not produce plants with blooms like their mother as roses cross-pollinate. My question, will these specimen work? I realize this maybe an exercise in futility.

So I looked on the internet and found these directions from the Alaskan Rose Society:

Mrs. Lester Mears of Palmer, a consulting rosarian of the American Rose Society, gathers rose hips at any stage of ripeness, from "one pink cheek" to mushy-ripe, preferably before the prolonged winter freeze.



Sowing rose seeds is easy. Here’s how Betty Mears does it. Mrs. Mears removes the seeds from the hips and washes them in a cup of water to which she adds a drop of detergent and a drop of laundry bleach. She rinses the seeds, then dries them on a towel. (Soak seeds in 3% peroxide for 24 hours - dispose of seeds that float.)



Milled sphagnum moss, saturated with water and squeezed dry, is mixed with the seeds. Mrs. Mears puts hers in a small jar, making sure some seeds are visible through the glass so she can tell when germination takes place.



The jar is covered lightly and stowed in the refrigerator, labeled and dated. you could use a plastic bag, secured with a twist-tie, and check it occasionally to keep it moist.



Depending on variety, rose seeds germinate in a 40-degree refrigerator in 30 to 120 days. When thread-like roots show through the jar, they’re ready for potting up, so check them as the time draws near. You may get one seedling, or many.



Shake the peat moss out of the jar and plant the seedlings in little pots or flats of commercial potting mix.



Set the pots on trays of wet gravel or enclose them in open plastic bags to create a greenhouse climate.



Give the young ones all the light you can, either at a window or under florescent tubes. Mrs. Mears turns her pots as the plants bend to the light and fertilizes them every other week with a diluted water-soluble fertilizer.

So, any other words of wisdom?

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Ceropegia woodii aka String of Hearts

Ceropegia woodii  aka String of Hearts  on 365 Project

A hanging vine, native to South Africa, is a good patio/indoor plant for bright indirect sun. Protect when temperatures fall below 60 degrees F. Well drained soil, needs no humidity.

Mine is about 9 feet long now. I currently have about 3 feet of it wrapped up into a terracotta pot with soil. Not the ideal propagating conditions but it keeps the vine contained until I can get it to its permanent home.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Rosa 'Grootendorst Supreme'

Rosa 'Grootendorst Supreme' on 365 Project
Day 3 of my 365 Project is the rose called 'Grootendorst Supreme' (1936).

Currently, being tortured in a pot, this rose is responding well to the cool winter weather by giving me beautiful "fall" color. Just as the blueberry I posted yesterday, foliage of ordinary plants can provide color in a dreary winter world.

This hybrid rugosa's thorny canes are not as mean as they appear.

A dark red rose with one inch blooms in clusters for USDA zone 3b and warmer. I think each flower looks like a carnation with its serrated edges. Not well liked in the rose world since it's small blooms have little to no fragrance, the bush can get a little gangly at times. In northern parts of the US it will bloom in the spring (early summer) with some repeat later. In the south (like Texas) you will be lucky to see many blooms at all. Some rosarians report black spot, etc. which I personally have not seen.

This branch is new since pruning last October.

It must not be struggling too badly as it seems I have leaves to come. So, why do I grow this rose with so little attributes? For the vision I see today and the hope of many blooms in the Spring.

"The 365 project is a photography project where you document a year of your life by taking a daily photo. Everyone can take part and join in! All you need is a camera." Click here to join in.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Today on 365 - Blueberries

Blueberry flower on 365 Project

Vaccinium corymbosum 'Sunshine Blue' (click on photo to go to my 365 page)

Perhaps if I take a photo each day of a different plant I own ....

"The 365 project is a photography project where you document a year of your life by taking a daily photo. Everyone can take part and join in! All you need is a camera." Click here to join in.

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Shopping and the 365 Project


Post dated post to start my 365 project as suggested by Gardening with a Not So Angry Red Head on her posting here. I take many photos each day sometimes instead of writing things in a notebook. This photo is to remind me this shelving may have a home in our new place.