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'Dolly Parton' rose Reviews & Comments
Discussion id : 167-537
most recent 14 JUN HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 14 JUN
* Posted by unregistered site guest: Pending HMF administrative review. *
Discussion id : 133-502
most recent 26 JUN 22 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 26 JUN 22 by MADActuary
I am thrilled to report that I may actually have a "good" Dolly Parton bush under that magnificent bloom. Second year grafted plant is looking good and is throwing up two basal canes at the moment. When I grew Dolly many years ago those basal canes were very hard to come by. I'm excited to have any at all yet alone two!

Update two months later: Dolly has continued her spectacular performance through July and August, My one plant has given me ~15 blooms with good stems this year and that special Dolly fragrance is always there. Cut a little tight Dolly can last a week and even longer in the vase. In years past I would be happy with just a few good blooms on Dolly. I don't know how I ended up with an awesome specimen of Dolly Parton but I do feel fortunate.
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Discussion id : 101-943
most recent 6 MAR 22 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 4 JUL 17 by GardenGlimpses
In the remake of Beauty and Beast, the heroine Belle exclaims to the Beast: 'A lifetime sentence...just for a single rose!' . She said this because her father was thrown in jail for life for stealing a bloom from the haunted garden. But immediately I thought of this rose, Dolly Parton. As long you own it, for its lifetime, plan on being sentenced to spraying and coddling it. It will will reward you with these magnificent blooms...huge, fully petaled with elegant and complex recurve, prissy high centers, sumptuous fragrance, long lasting, in a incredibly saturated scarlet orange. But while bloom has absolutely every desirable quality in spades, the underlying plant has none. The plant itself will be a thorny vision of Charlie Brown's Christmas Tree, a weak sapling making a futile effort to carry these enormous gaudy ornaments. It will require every sort of life support you can muster...Insecticide, fungicides on rotation, rich soil, amendments (alfalfa and fish emulsion please!), perhaps some support stakes to prevent collapse, warmth (does Amazon carry a rose heater?) , moist air (humidifier?).. for it to struggle along. It has the unique ability to get blackspot and mildew with equal ease. So keep up the intensive care regimen, in my mind this rose is worth it!
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Reply #1 of 9 posted 4 JUL 17 by Nastarana
In my experience, both parents are much healthier than your description of DP. I did grow 'Fragrant Cloud' long before its' alleged decline in vigor which is being complained of recently. It did need some support from fertilizers but grew into a large bush not notably more diseased than other HTs.

Is DP, in your opinion, really any improvement over FC?
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Reply #2 of 9 posted 5 JUL 17 by GardenGlimpses
In the 1990s a public rose garden I lived near (Zilker Park, Austin TX) had a bed of each rose, Dolly Parton and Fragrant Cloud. FC was by far the better plant, it's not even close. But I think FC back then was one of the easiest and most rewarding roses of all, while DP has always been a diva. I grew FC myself for many years, it was everything I could want in a modern rose...healthy, robust, generous, a very attractive bush plant always loaded with bright, hugely scented blooms. It's a shame that FC is in decline, I'm still trying to find a healthy plant of it. But the individual bloom of DP is larger, more saturated in color, higher centered , and petals more recurved, with the exact same wonderful fragrance inherited from FC....it really is most impressive, and for that, it's still worth growing.

From Oklahoma, DP inherited a propensity to mildew...but I agree, Oklahoma is even a better garden rose than DP.
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Reply #6 of 9 posted 5 MAR 22 by Michael Garhart
The Fragrant Cloud down the street is a slam dance performer. It is grafted with no special care. I think there are still amazing clones of it out there.

FC stays in its lane. Both Dolly Parton and Oklahoma get over 8' here. They're obscene plants. But, yeah, the blooms are super cool on both.
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Reply #7 of 9 posted 5 MAR 22 by StrawChicago heavy clay zone 5
I need obscenely tall plants to repel rabbits, will grab Oklahoma if I see it cheap at local store. Thank you for the info.
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Reply #8 of 9 posted 6 MAR 22 by Michael Garhart
Be sure its not tender there. I live next to temperate rainforest so mileage may vary.

I think Selfridges is a harder tall beast HT.

If HT is not a requirement, Robusta is #1 at being a self-supporting monster that repels critters. I dislike that rose so much, but its a living fence for sure.
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Reply #9 of 9 posted 6 MAR 22 by StrawChicago heavy clay zone 5
Thank you. Dave and Deb Boyd grew Oklahoma in their zone 5, Montana.
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Reply #3 of 9 posted 10 JAN 20 by drossb1986
I love this review. It reminds me of how I feel about Stainless Steel. You baby the heck out of it just to get those stunning, perfect blooms you know it can produce. 100% worth it when you get them but a wreck the rest of the time. I planted DP late last year, and she just sat there because it got too hot to do much else. We will see how she performs after a good pruning, fertilizing, and cooler temps.
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Reply #5 of 9 posted 31 JAN 20 by GardenGlimpses
Stainless Steel got the shovel from me. Had difficulty opening in all sorts of weather, and the dingy pale gray showed every blemish. I actually far prefer Dolly Parton, her blooms are super impressive and weather/heat resistant, it’s just the plant that is rather puny.
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Reply #4 of 9 posted 25 JAN 20 by Austin 08
delightful and helpful review
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Discussion id : 129-476
most recent 27 OCT 21 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 27 OCT 21 by MADActuary
I could not agree more with the Comments below. Dolly requires an oversize investment - which in turn will provide you with a few (and only a few) gorgeous orange/red huge blooms with incredible fragrance. She's not really a grower or a bloomer, but there will be at least one jaw-dropping bloom per season.
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