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Re: Rosa eglanteria/rose gall -Reply
- To: r*@eskimo.com
- Subject: Re: Rosa eglanteria/rose gall -Reply
- From: S* S* <S*@Schwabe.com>
- Date: Tue, 04 Aug 1998 10:08:45 -0800
- Content-Disposition: inline
- Resent-Date: Tue, 4 Aug 1998 10:38:11 -0700
- Resent-From: rose-list@eskimo.com
- Resent-Message-ID: <"JNZzG3.0.RQ.2Sqnr"@mx1>
- Resent-Sender: rose-list-request@eskimo.com
Out of 70+ roses I've never had this before
UNTIL I had this rose. I don't believe it's
crown gall, nothing going on there. I realize
they may look for another host, but my book
said they typically went for species roses, and
this is the only one I have.
I have removed the canes, its more of a matter
of being able to check for this in the future and
the fact that its happened twice in about 1
month that concerns me. The rose grows on a
shared fence with a neighbor and I won't have
access to "1/2" the rose, and they aren't
interested in watching the rose on their side. I
don't see that I will be able to really keep an
eye on the rose and don't want it getting out of
hand because of that or spreading.
I appreciate your opinion and advice/experience.
First, I would make sure you have "rose gall,"
and not "crown gall," which
is a serious bacterial disease. Second, since you
have established a
pattern, it appears like removing that particular
plant *may* provide
relief. In my experience, however, the wasps
that are responsible will
merely select another victim if their preferred
host in unavailable. How bad
is this problem? removing a cane or two should
be all that is required to
eliminate the problem.
-Dave-
-----Original Message-----
From: SUSAN SAXTON <SS@Schwabe.com>
To: rose-list@eskimo.com
<rose-list@eskimo.com>
Date: Tuesday, August 04, 1998 1:29 AM
Subject: Rosa eglanteria/rose gall
>Second year in my garden for this rose. And
>second time this year I found that tennis ball
>shaped, moss covered stuff that according to
>one of my rose books is rose gall (where the
>insect bores into the cane, lays eggs and as
eggs
>grow, cane swells). For some reason, this
>absolutely grosses me out!
>
>Anyway. My book says its common to
species
>roses. This is the only rose I have that gets
>this. Is this going to be a common problem?
>I'd rather get rid of the rose than deal with
this.
> I have about 70+ roses on a 70 x 100 city lot,
>all old, English, a few teas.
>
>Anyone have experience with this? Any help
is
>appreciated!
>
>
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