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Hi all,
I really liked Livin Easy BUT had to shovel prune because of bad blackspot in our no spray garden! LE got through our winters fine, grew fast, and LE bloomed well with 3+" bloom size...
LOCATION: CENTRAL PA....
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#1 of 11 posted
5 SEP 13 by
Jay-Jay
The same over here and it got weaker every year and died.
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#2 of 11 posted
9 MAY 15 by
Shredder
It had blackspot in my garden as well. It died last year after a very, very cold winter in zone 6/5.
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#3 of 11 posted
9 MAY 15 by
Jay-Jay
The final blow indeed came from a very cold winter too over here.
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#4 of 11 posted
2 JUN 15 by
sutekesh
This is the third season in my garden, Zone 6b Switzerland and already showing signs of black spot - again!! I am going to make a habit of reading the member comments and not just the main page in future.
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#5 of 11 posted
2 JUN 15 by
Jay-Jay
A very good intention! Sometimes ratings are a hint too.
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#6 of 11 posted
2 JUN 15 by
Jay-Jay
So the statement in the description, that this rose is "very blackspot-resistent", can be referred to the garbage bin... or to the land of the fairy-tales.
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Binned. Thanks Jay-Jay
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Did great first year, beautiful abundant roses and second year nothing.
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I have to spray fungicide on all of my Hybrid Teas and Floribunda's here in hot humid florida. I can grow old Teas, Noisettes and some shrubs here without spraying, but I will continue to spray my HT's and FL's twice a month for unique and beautiful flowers .
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#10 of 11 posted
27 FEB 20 by
HappyRose
What brand do u use of fungicide
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It depends, In the cooler months I mix Daconil and Propaconizole together in one spray tank and apply it twice a month. In warmer weather I rotate with either Immunox or Theophanate Methyl, or Propaconizole mixed with Dithane. Rotation is key so blackspot doesn't develop resistance. My spray period is March through October. If we go through a hot and dry period, I usually quit spraying for that time since the warm and dry weather naturally reduces disease. I don't spray my OGRs or Shrub roses and they do fine. This program is for picky hybrid teas, like Peace, Brandy, Papa Meilland. I can grow Mr. Lincoln or floribundas like Valentine without spraying but I love yellos and orange long stemmed HTs as well
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My garden/landscape is zone 6 (Northern KY). This rose is always blooming. It has darker, almost blackish-green, foliage. The plant is very well-behaved. It gets about 3 feet high by 3 feet wide roughly in my garden. I never had much problem with blackspot. It did sometimes have mildew (rare for that here in my limited experience), but it wasn't very noticeable. The mildew certainly didn't appear to affect the plants blooms. It was planted facing Northwest against the house in clay soil (no amendments). It probably could have benefited from a bit more light, but it still did well. At the time, I was new to gardening (I actually started the rose out on a slope, on the edge of a wood line, where I later learned very little grows due to dry soil/competition with trees). I was forced to move the rose (and several other plants) though. I think the best way to learn is experience though, right?
I grew pink Knock Outs, Julia Child Rose, Livin' Easy and this rose until the winter of 2013-2014. I lost my White Out Rose and Livin' Easy Rose this winter. I had the White Out rose for 4-5 years with no problems until then. This past winter was unusually cold around the U.S. and Kentucky/Cincinnati was no exception. It might benefit from protection in colder zones. I noticed no scent from this rose. It's not a very pretty bloom in comparison with a Julia Child per se. However, for a landscape rose, this is a very nice rose and blooms almost continuously throughout the growing season. The one thing I will note about the blooms is that as it ages, it tends to turn brown before falling off. Again not a huge deal to me, but it might matter to some.
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