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'Savannah Sunbelt ®' rose Reviews & Comments
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I'm actually quite pleased with the fragrance on my first year plants. They are still showing a preference for shade in Z8 but hopefully next year will be better for overall blooming. Very clean foliage in my no-spray garden.
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Wow! What a beauty. I have always been fond of the Kordes roses, but this little princess is something special. She was a band that I ordered from Heirloom and was in perfect condition when she arrived. She even showed up at my home with a lovely little bud. I have only had this rose for a little over a week and am really impressed. As the new kid on the block, (only 18 inches tall) she has held her head up and lived through a couple of mid 90s days in Antioch, , , hot and blistery sun. Her bloom is still in perfect shape 7 days later. The color is a beautiful shade of salmon and the petals are as pretty as a picture. The blossom flattens out slightly making her a very unique shape. And her petals are (as my god daughter said) ruffled. She is a little similar in shape to my beautiful camellias. This is a very young plant and I am looking forward to her maturing. Already she has a lovely fragrance. What else can I say. I AM IMPRESSED!!
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Thank you for giving me hope for this rose The plant of 'Savannah' I received from Chamblees has so far showed no interest in growing at all. Meanwhile 'Zaide', from the same order, is growing and blooming. Both are planted near each other, in locations which have 6-8 hrs. of sun daily.
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How is your Savannah doing? Mine in the shade are growing in Z8, which was 100 degrees yesterday in mid-September. The ones in the sun have been in the ground for a couple months longer without a bloom so far.
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I really think it needs warmth and a long growing season.
It remains a mollycoddled, pampered spoilt baby, about 18" tall, which has not happened to feel up to blooming this year, 1916. In contrast, little "Benny Lopez", also at about 18", has produced three separate and spectacular flushes, despite being overshadowed by that thug, Duchess de Rohan.
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Oh no, sorry to hear that! And I thought it was my direct sun that she didn't like. I prefer purple tones but bought Savannah for her reported heat tolerance. My shaded ones are growing but have only had one flower on each bush so far. It was a very bright coral pink, not dusky at all for me. Thanks for your thoughts!
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Savannah has now produced one bloom which is distinguished by a nice green vegetative center. I do hope this not going to become a habit.
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Peter Kukielski, former curator of the award-winning rose garden at the New York Botanical Garden highlights 150 tough new rose varieties that don't require spraying in his recent book, "Roses Without Chemicals". He rates roses based on his and others experience. He rates Savannah 60/60 for disease resistance, 25/30 for flowering, & 9/10 for fragrance. I highly recommend his book. I'm in the process of getting this and other roses he recommends. I live in Seattle, black spot heaven and don't spray. I have a lot of roses.
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This a beautiful rose. I am seeing some BS on the lower leaves only. The upper, more visible foliage is not only clean but also a very nice medium to dark green color. The plant has a nice growth habit, growing outwards rather than straight up, and is densely foliaged.
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It's a terrific book. I look at it often and have taken some of his suggestions.
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Now, after growing 'Savannah' for two seasons, I doubt I would keep it if I did not have a granddaughter of the same name. For me, this has been a small, slow growing plant which has not bloomed all season, and it is prone to BS.
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That's odd, since you're in the same area that Kukielski was in. I wonder what he was doing to get it to go well.
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There is a big difference of ambient temperature. The New York Botanical Garden is in The Bronx, NYC, USDA zone 7b; I am in the Mohawk Valley, zone 5, and in a frost pocket. Also consider the way a large city gathers heat.
I think 'Savannah' is a slow grower which simply needs a mild climate, maybe 6b or warmer would be my guess. It is "hardy" in the sense that a few twigs survive the winter freeze, but grows back veery slowly. I have climbing HTs which grow back from winter much faster.
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Aside from the color, this rose closely resembles a rose from the 80's known as Esmeralda or Keepsake. Form, fragrance, slighter lighter reverse. and wonderful form.
At least one nursery out there probably grows both, I'd like to see them side by side!
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