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digger
most recent yesterday SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 22 SEP 06 by digger
One of the best roses I have ever grown. We got a second one in 2005. I gave it more room than the one planted in 2001. I didn't realize how large the rascal would get. We are disappointed when the older bush only has 50 to 60 blooms... it usually produces 70+ per flush.
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Reply #1 of 1 posted yesterday by Michael Garhart
I won more awards with this mini than any other mini, when I exhibited as a teen and in my early 20s. Its ungodly floriferous. It has issues (bs and prickles), but if you want a rose not named The Fairy that consistently pumps blooms out simply because you looked at it sideways, this is it.
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most recent 6 JUL 22 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 28 FEB 09 by digger
We got Easy Going in 2004. Livin’ Easy had been such a good rose that we wanted to try the sport. We usually buy grafted plants but found an own root that looked very healthy and decided to give it a chance. There was a spot open between Livin’ Easy and Redgold so it got planted next to its established, grafted parent. It is on the east side of the lot along the driveway. It is protected from the wind there and has lots of snow piled on it in winter. It only gets about 6 hours of sun per day.

Easy Going is not cane hardy here. Canes die to the mounding or snow line. Spring growth usually starts early. That can be a bad thing. We get very hard freezes until mid May. Some early starters have to start over. New growth on EG takes the frost well. It begins blooming about the same time as LE, a few weeks after the first bloomers in our yard. Improvement has been steady and it now gives us 4 to 5 dozen blooms per flush. Turnaround time is average, about 6 weeks. Blooms open in a couple days and look good about a week. Deb doesn’t use many in bouquets. Fragrance is very mild to my nose. Deb says the scent is a bit stronger to her.

Easy Going gets 3 feet tall x 4 feet wide for us. Foliage is great, just like Livin’ Easy.
Blackspot isn't a problem for healthy roses here. I have experimented some with EG and LE. I didn’t wash foliage for a couple weeks. No powdery mildew showed on them though conditions were perfect for the stuff.

Excellent rose

Dave
South central Montana - zone 4/5

Note: Betty Boop and Easy Going are the only roses we bought own root.
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Reply #1 of 1 posted 6 JUL 22 by Michael Garhart
I always love your posts. Montana is such an extreme state and its really helpful for people to see others in non-temperate climates showing full plant photos.
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most recent 6 OCT 20 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 22 DEC 06 by digger

I was 9 years old in 1961 when we moved back to the states (Air Force brat). Dad got Mom a Mirandy and a Crimson Glory. One of my chores was to care for them. The obsession began. The fragrant rascal is always one of the first roses I look for. Mirandy was the best of my fragrant reds in Sacramento. Mirandy does not like the cold weather in Montana as much as my other old pals. She survives and puts a decent show. She is not the star she was CA though. Canes die back below the mulch line. Spring growth is slow and steady (8 yr old plant). First blooms are usually a couple weeks behind the bulk of our roses and sometimes the last. Petals often quill quickly but the blooms smell fantastic.


Mirandy gets 4 feet tall and wide here (as opposed to 8 x 8 in Sacramento). Growth isn't as thick as I like and she looks leggy even if she isn't tall. We get a dozen to 20 blooms per flush. Turnaround time is average, about 6 weeks. We don't have blackspot here. Don't recall having seen powdery mildew on Mirandy. Excellent fragrant red for warmer zones.


Dave Boyd


South central Montana - zone 4/5

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Reply #1 of 6 posted 11 AUG 10 by redwood rose
I wonder if your Mirandy in Sac was on its own roots? Mine is, and it is about three or four years old, and still three feet or so tall. It is still short, but produces great blooms (see pics). My plant is in only about five hours of sun per day here in West Marin Co. We get morning fog in summer, but rarely all day, and she gets some rust and blackspot, no mildew, and keeps blooming all summer and fall.
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Reply #2 of 6 posted 5 OCT 20 by happymaryellen
Where in west marin? I am in san rafael, thinking of this rose...iget sun alllll day
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Reply #3 of 6 posted 5 OCT 20 by redwood rose
I’m in the San Geronimo Valley. I took out my Mirandy a few years ago. It would be better on a grafted plant I think, as it has weak growth.
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Reply #4 of 6 posted 6 OCT 20 by happymaryellen
My son went to school there! And I am copres of local rose society with a gal in the valley named Connie. So many loveky gardens out your way!
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Reply #6 of 6 posted 6 OCT 20 by redwood rose
I know Connie. She’s been to my garden. I grow about 130 roses on an acre. Most of mine are older, rare roses from Vintage Gardens.
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Reply #5 of 6 posted 6 OCT 20 by happymaryellen
And thanks for tips on mirandy
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most recent 23 JAN 18 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 1 OCT 08 by digger
Is Fubar an Irish term? The acronym we used in the Corps is not a name I expected to see on a rose. Interesting.

Dave
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Reply #1 of 2 posted 1 OCT 08 by Margaret Furness
The acronym is international. Used in Australia for geological specimens, eg fubarite. Cf leverite (as in "leave her right where she is"). "The rare fossil you've collected with your geologist's hammer is fubarite; the one still in situ is leverite."
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Reply #2 of 2 posted 23 JAN 18 by Kim Rupert
I'm a bit late to the party here, but in the US, it means a much less couth version of " 'fouled up' beyond all recognition".
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