This is a public-interest archive. Personal data is pseudonymized and retained under
GDPR Article 89.
Re: [SG] Solutions & Question -Reply
- To: s*@MAELSTROM.STJOHNS.EDU
- Subject: Re: [SG] Solutions & Question -Reply
- From: S* S* <S*@SCHWABE.COM>
- Date: Tue, 5 May 1998 14:12:04 -0800
- Content-Disposition: inline
I agree basically. In nature the way they
"climb" is those long usually flexible canes hook
onto things with their thorns as they grow up
for the light. Some don't try to grow up, but
have long canes that flop down, so you have a
fountain effect.
>>> Lew Jansen
<lewj@MINDSPRING.COM> 05/05/98
08:52am >>>
From my limited knowledge of such stuff (I am
no expert!), there are no
roses that are climbers in the true sense of the
word.
There are three fundamental ways for vines to
climb: suckers, tendrils &
twining. Most ivy's use suckers, little "pads"
that attach themselves to
whatever they're climbing. Grape vines use
tendrils, little growths that
come out of the vine & wrap themselves around
something. Morning Glories &
Clematis appear to twine; the stem of the plant
grows in a spiral around
the support, such as a wire or a string.
No roses do anything like that. The only way
"climbing" roses attach
themselves to things like an arbor or trellis is
for folks like us to put
the cane up there and tie it to the support with
a twist-tie or some
string. Thus, "climbing" roses don't "climb" in
the true sense of the
word, they just grow really long canes that lend
themselves to being tied
up to a fence or an arbor.
-- Lew
Atlanta, GA
Zone 7a
At 11:45 AM 5/5/98 EDT, you wrote:
>In our paper this morning in the horticulture
section it stated ' there
are no
>such
>species, as a climbing rose bush, just leggy
rose bushes'. I have several
rose
>bushes that climb and are very full. Is the
statement true??
>
>Jennifer Sheppard
>N. Louisiana
>zone 8
>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lew Jansen
lewj@mindspring.com
Other Mailing lists |
Author Index |
Date Index |
Subject Index |
Thread Index