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'Planten en Blomen' rose Reviews & Comments
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A person in my local rose group claims that this rose is a *monster*, growing over 8’ tall and wide. Can anyone either verify or say otherwise? I bought this to plant near my miniatures but am re-thinking. Most sellers say that it stays small, though. Thoughts? I’m in zone 7a, NJ.
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I planted 3 of these close together last April (2021 - Chicago area). Generally in my garden the bushes were about 2.5 foot tall - excellent soil, drainage and sunlight. Late in the year one bush threw a big basal break which perhaps grew to 3 feet with many, many blooms. This rose is not a monster grower - at least not in zone 5b. In NJ, which is milder than Chicago, you might see 4 feet tall but I would say 3 feet is your best bet. Try it - I bet you'll like it.
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Yesterday this rose got 'de gouden roos van Den Haag' ( The golden rose of The Hague) in the 2011 the Hague rose trials, the Netherlands. The correct name is Planten und Blomen.
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#1 of 4 posted
8 JUL 11 by
jedmar
Hans, 'Planten un Blomen' without the d of "und" is correct, this is dialect from Hamburg. This is the name of a very famous park there.
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Yes, I know. But Kordes used the name with a d. I asked them...
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#3 of 4 posted
9 JUL 11 by
jedmar
That is very strange: The trademark they registered is 'Planten un Blomen':
http://www.gartenrosen.de/skin/frontend/default/kordes/images/Kordes_Marken.pdf?frontend=frpzgrbncj
The same is on their website:
http://www.gartenrosen.de/gartenrose-planten-un-blomen-872
I am afraid the person who answered you was not competent.
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Well... it was the big boss himself. But I am sure we must misunderstood him. Whatever. Is it a good idea to put the name planten und blomen as a synonym? That way most peope who look in the wrong way, still find the plant.
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