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'Sweet Drift ®' rose Reviews & Comments
Discussion id : 131-491
most recent 30 JAN 22 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 30 JAN 22 by Claire
i recently ordered two plants of sweet drift from amazon. They came rather sad looking about two months ago in late november, dried out with a few dessicated leaves and no buds. I planted them right away on two properties about three miles apart in houston tx. One is on the north side of a house in a spot which has no direct sun in winter at all; the other gets maybe an hour of morning sun at this time of year. Both will be in increasing sun through spring and pretty much full sun from may to august but really I expected nothing to happen before the sun hit them in april. However both leafed out beautifully right away turning into perfectly round green leafy shrubs and both got lots of buds. The one with a teeny bit of sun, which has some ground covering asiatic jasmine under it and is planted close to some other roses (thus less air circulation overall) has got mildew all over the top, and has fewer viable buds, but is still blooming. The one with no direct sun at all but more air circulation has zero mildew and is blooming quite well. Both have flowers much bigger and a much darker pink than I expected. The flowers are close to two inches across and seem to last a long time on the bush in the cool weather, days and days with hardly any fading. Note from one year later: what photos don't show (including my own) is that newly opened flowers are a warm orange-pink to coral color. This eventually fades to a more standard baby pink. Foliage is good year round and does not get much if any chili thrip damage.
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Discussion id : 130-828
most recent 24 DEC 21 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 24 DEC 21 by JuniperAnn
I live in Zone 9a, Gulf Coast.

This is my MOST shade-tolerant rose. More shade-tolerant than The Fairy. More shade-tolerant than the Knock Out roses. It bloomed all winter in a spot with only about 2 hours of sun per day. However, if you do grow it in shade, the blooms will be hot pink. It has no fragrance, and I don’t love hot pink, so I’m going to tuck it in a spot in the back of my yard where few other things will bloom.
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Discussion id : 127-852
most recent 28 MAY 21 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 28 MAY 21 by Lesky
I am in Zone 6, (Michigan) and usually our summers are hot and humid. I have a 4-yr old Sweet Drift growing in a dry, afternoon sun location in a mixed border. Sweet is apt, because the blooms make me think of candy, although without fragrance and with substantial prickles, I seem to keep my distance. It has been tough as nails for me, though, even if somewhat neglected. Always seems to be healthy and happy. I haven't seen any mildew, sometimes a teeny bit of blackspot in late Sept. but I barely notice it. If I was to do it all over again, I would probably seek something with similar qualities but with fragrance and easier to get close to.
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Discussion id : 90-111
most recent 15 JUN 19 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 3 JAN 16 by Pat Wallace zone 5a Illinois
In my yard in northern Illinois Sweet Drift is highly susceptible to mildew. I grew this rose several years ago and it was shovel pruned. There has been so much talk of drift roses these days. My skills as a rose gardener improved thru the years and my soil is much improved. I replanted Sweet Drift to see if there would be any improvement. It has now completed two full years. Both years covered from head to toe in powderery mildew.
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Reply #1 of 5 posted 4 JAN 16 by Nastarana
Have you considered replacing with one of the Medilland series? Those were released before the Drift series. I have grown 'Pink Medilland', 'White Medilland' and 'Alba Medilland", and I think they are all excellent cultivars. I don't recall ever seeing mildew on any of those three.
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Reply #2 of 5 posted 4 JAN 16 by Pat Wallace zone 5a Illinois
Thank you for your suggestion. I have found suitable alternatives for my area. Flower Carpets and several of the smaller Kordes ground cover rose grow very well here. They are nearly disease free in my no spray garden. I also have 2 from the drift series that have done well but are only in their first year. Far too young too comment on.
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Reply #3 of 5 posted 4 JAN 16 by Nastarana
Which carpets and ground cover roses do you like? I have 'Green Snake", a true creeping ground cover from Lens in Belgium. The leaves are completely spotless here in blackspot central, and the plants survive my cold, wet winters, also 5a, with no protection of any kind, but the flowers are insignificant.
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Reply #5 of 5 posted 15 JUN 19 by AnnaR
I have Flower Carpet Apple Blossom planted in part-shade. A very healthy spreading plant, nice flowers true to their "apple blossom" name. Comes into its own after second season in the ground. Blooms even in partial shade. The color goes well with cold pinks, purples and lilacs.
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Reply #4 of 5 posted 15 JUN 19 by AnnaR
Agree entirely about mildew. The bloom was s lovely that I even used copper fungicide spray - once only in my no spray garden. The next year this lovely rose was again covered with mildew and was deported to a spray garden of a less demanding friend.
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