Gargoyle Garden

Jun 02, 2013 02:04


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Comments 22

jamjar_girl June 2 2013, 09:19:55 UTC
Beautiful! Thank you for sharing your Gargoyle garden :)
Have you heard of the book "Macoboy's Roses"? It's a fabulous book for rose lovers. My hub bought me a copy many years ago and I still love browsing through it now and again.

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bojojoti June 2 2013, 12:24:56 UTC
I have some wonderful rose books, but I don't have that one. I wasn't familiar with Macoboy, but I see he is "the" Australian flower expert. If I had one of his books, I'd only be able to drool over the selections, as I wouldn't be able to grow many of them due to our winters. My poor roses have to be able to survive heat, drought, flood, hard freezes, and gales of wind. It's a tough life for a rose. There are roses that like the heat, and there are roses bred in Canada that can take the cold, but it's asking a lot for a rose to do both and more, besides!

My roses thank you for looking!

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bojojoti June 3 2013, 01:42:20 UTC
I love the work. I wish I had more energy. Back in the day, I could stay in the garden until after dark!

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e_musings June 2 2013, 12:51:00 UTC
another visually delightful post! Thank you!

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bojojoti June 3 2013, 01:42:35 UTC
You're quite welcome!

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pondhopper June 2 2013, 15:01:36 UTC
What do you feed your roses because they obviously love the diet!
:)
Pure Poetry really does live up to that name.
I love how you've divided your garden into named sections.

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bojojoti June 3 2013, 02:01:25 UTC
When I plant my roses, I put a handful of triple phosphate at the bottom of the hole and cover it with a layer of soil. Thank goodness they have that to "snack" upon, because I've been very remiss in giving them anything the last three years. My oldest roses--the ones that are thriving--were accustomed to received an annual dosing of alfalfa tea:

http://www.ars.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/Alfalfa-Tea.pdf

I would advise against keeping a tight lid on things. It seems to me pressure would build up, and the last thing you'd want is an alfalfa tea explosion! I put my lid on loosely, if at all. I would also warn you against adding anything other than the alfalfa during the "cooking" phase. Trust me, the alfalfa will smell enough. Once, I was daft enough to add a bottle of fish emulsion at the beginning of the week. At the end of the week, I could barely approach the container, and I half-heartedly wretched while applying the concoction ( ... )

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bojojoti June 3 2013, 02:02:00 UTC
I love my roses and enjoy sharing them. Thanks for looking!

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