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zlesak
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Available from - Edmund's Roses as Oso Happy Candy Oh! http://www.edmundsroses.com
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We have added this synonym for the rose and also added it's availability from Edmunds. Thank you.
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#2 of 3 posted
1 MAY 13 by
Chris
Hurryup and get it! They[re discontinuing it and it's on special right now!
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#3 of 3 posted
12 MAY by
zlesak
Matt Douglas from High Country Roses thankfully is growing and selling it now.
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Initial post
29 DEC 22 by
zlesak
This is a super special rose. It's a fertile diploid with rich yellow blooms, which makes it unusual enough already. I suspect it holds very nice potential for breeding. It is also very healthy. I love the work Larry Davis is doing combining R. foetida genetics in new breeding lines with healthier modern roses.
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#1 of 6 posted
29 DEC 22 by
styrax
The photos are gorgeous, a lush & rich gold-yellow.
Foetida gets a bit of a bad rap when it comes to disease: while there are plenty of weak ones, there are some hybrid foetidas that are actually pretty clean: Tip-Top & Mevrouw Nathalie Nypels come to mind.
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Yes! And there are some remarkable Pernetiana-type HT’s well over 70 years old that have passed the test of time with flying colours. Beautiful, long-lived roses that get better and stronger with age - some very special ones among them. The subject of this post looks beautiful - a gorgeous colour.
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#3 of 6 posted
30 DEC 22 by
jedmar
How do you explain it being diploid with known tetraploid ancestors?
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#4 of 6 posted
30 DEC 22 by
zlesak
Great question Jedmar. I suspect its parents are both triploid. I counted First Impression and it is triploid. Finding 13-1 as a diploid made me question the ploidy of 'Austrian Copper' and if it really is 4x like the literature lists it as. I got an own root plant from High Country Roses last spring and counted it and that plant at least is 3x. Another possibility is that 13-1 developed from an unfertilized egg of the maternal parent and doesn't have First Impression as a real paternal parent. My suspicion is that it is the first idea due to the races of black spot it is resistant to. It is nice how fertile it is. I have a plant in the cooler covered with hips and should take a photo and upload it for the hip shape, etc.
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That's quite a fortunate outcome.
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#6 of 6 posted
1 JAN 23 by
jedmar
Very interesting, roses seem intent on breaking the rules!
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I believe the real name for this rose is OSO Easy Peasy®, not OSO Easy Pleasy. If you check the OSO Easy roses website, 'Easy Peasy' is mentioned there.
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#1 of 2 posted
27 JAN 22 by
jedmar
Corrected, thank you for the heads up!
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#2 of 2 posted
20 NOV 22 by
zlesak
Thank you for correcting it. It was going to be Oso Easy Pleasy, but Paul Zimmerman was gracious and let us use Oso Easy Peasy. He had a series Easy PZ roses after his initials.
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Initial post
28 OCT 19 by
zlesak
Here is a link to the article we published characterizing the black spot resistance gene in Brite EyesTM.
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpls.2018.01730/full
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#1 of 3 posted
28 OCT 19 by
jedmar
Thank you, reference and link to the article added.
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#2 of 3 posted
2 NOV 22 by
Pay130
I wonder if rainbow knock out also inherits rdr4 from radtee?
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#3 of 3 posted
2 NOV 22 by
zlesak
That is a great question and I've been wondering that too. Hopefully we'll be able to determine that in the not to distant future. :0)
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