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"Jefferson Rose" Reviews & Comments
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Initial post
21 FEB 23 by
ldmont
In my Zone 9b garden Softee is extremely healthy and covered with very attractive blooms. It is a nice moderate size after 2+ years of about 3' x 3'. Highly recommend for hot climates. Only drawback is no fragrance (that I can smell).
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It will eventually get at least 6' across with no pruning.
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Reply
#2 of 3 posted
4 MAY 23 by
ldmont
I have already had to prune it, which it does not seem to object to at all. Covered with beautiful blooms right now.
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Yes, I pruned mine hard too after several seasons and it bounced back very nicely.
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Initial post
3 SEP 22 by
connon
Softee just loves the heat! I have mine in all day sun with southern exposure. We are one week into our first triple digit heatwave in Southern California and Softee didn’t break stride. I cut a spray of fresh roses for the vase this morning and the blooms were perfect. Mine gets lots of water because it is in the same drip zone as my annuals and the smart Rachio irrigation controller (gets weather reports from internet) waters annuals every day or every other day in the heat of summer. It blooms in flushes with only about a week pause in between and each flush last about 4 weeks. Very floriferous! Completely thornless. Perfect disease resistant foliage, although we don’t get blackspot, rust and powdery mildew can be problematic. Beautiful mounding shrub. Only thing it lacks is scent.
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Initial post
22 NOV 17 by
Claire
Another follow up on this rose, four years after my last. I have not had much time for cultivation and have been away often in the summer as my parents needed me more. My roses had no water or care in summer and many of them died, only the Earthkind roses really going strong, and even Mutabilis gave up the ghost after Hurricane Harvey. The shade has increased in the spot where softee is planted, but softee increased with it, turning the corner of the house, sending out canes up to fourteen feet reaching for the light, crossing the fence and shrubbery to bloom on the sunside in the neighbors yard. Canes at the base are thick as my thumb. Never watered, lives in dry shade. This stress test replicates what Earthkind roses go through except for obvious reasons they are not typically given full shade. Rooted cuttings I took in 2013 also survived with minimal care in a pot. Now I've moved my mom here to a new house where I have a strip of sun along the south side. I brought the potted softee with me, and started to water it; it sent out a long root through the bottom of the pot before I got a chance to put it in the ground. I am not sure what I'm going to do with the mother plant, but it deserves a chance in a better location. This rose will survive anything, has been through transplant, flood, drought, and never gives up. The only trouble is finding a spot with consistent afternoon shade to protect the blooms.
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Initial post
15 JUL 13 by
Claire
Another update, Oct 2014 to say I've trellised it, I cannot keep it short by pruning, it wants to be big, but it is very docile, willing to go where it is put, absolutely thornless and easy to handle. I am growing it around the corner with trellises on both sides of the house corner. It remains happy in this position and I am very fond it it now. I am going to try rooting some cuttings this winter (mindful Kim Rupert says it is difficult to root) to see if the clones are as vigorous.
Another update, in July. My Jefferson Rose is blooming a little more nicely in the shade than it did in the sun; flowers are small (due to triple digit temps) but they keep their yellow color up to 24 hours and don't fade or start looking like used toilet paper till day two. Foliage still going strong, not a speck of disease. The canes are reaching for the light and I would say they want to go 5-8 feet. I can't decide whether to tie it up or cut it back. I can't find anyone who suggests Softee is a climber, exactly, no one says it has 8 foot canes. Very healthy and uncomplaining plant though, flourishing under the eaves of the house where I do not always remember to water it. Not a plant for full sun in Houston.
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