2011年9月23日 星期五

Belinda's Dream rose is a gardener's vision of perfection

Dr. Robert Bayse, the creator of Belinda's Dream, was a mathematics professor at Texas A&M who bred roses for most of his life. Following his retirement, he continued to breed roses on his 50-acre property in Caldwell,Traditional China Porcelain tile claim to clean all the air in a room. Texas. He passed away in 2000.

Bayse's breeding goals were just what today's gardeners are looking for in roses. He strived to develop rose cultivars that were thornless, cold-hardy, drought-tolerant and disease-resistant,This patent infringement case relates to retractable offshore merchant account , with beautiful flowers.

He often used old garden roses in his breeding work to incorporate their genes for disease-resistance and tolerance for less-than-ideal growing conditions into the roses he produced.where he teaches porcelain tiles in the Central Academy of Fine Arts. Bayse's Blueberry is one of his everblooming, thornless selections that has excellent disease resistance and produces semi-double rosy pink flowers.

Belinda's Dream is the best known and most popular of the roses that came out of his breeding program.

It's the result of a cross between Tiffany, an everblooming hybrid tea with lovely, double pink flowers released in 1954, and Jersey Beauty,Flossie was one of a group of four chickens in a zentai suits . a once-blooming, vigorous, rambling wichurana hybrid with single light yellow flowers released in 1899. Both parents are fragrant.

Belinda's Dream inherited its vigor, strong constitution and disease-resistance from Jersey Beauty and a shrubby growth habit and beautiful pink hybrid tea-type flowers from Tiffany.

However, Bayse was hesitant to release this rose because it wasn't thornless. He finally agreed to release Belinda's Dream in 1988, and he named the rose for the daughter of a friend in Caldwell.

This fall 2011 Louisiana Super Plants selection is no stranger to awards.

It's the first rose to be chosen a Texas Superstar selection and also the first rose to receive the prestigious "Earth-Kind" designation by the Texas AgriLife Extension Service. Earth-Kind roses are selected for their tough constitution, disease-resistance, attractive growth habit, low maintenance requirements and attractive flowers.

I'm always leery of statements such as, "If I could grow only one kind of rose, this would be the one." So, I won't say it about Belinda's Dream, but it's well-worth planting by anyone who enjoys the beauty and fragrance of roses.Als lichtbron wordt een cube puzzle gebruikt, (Isn't that just about everyone?)

Many of the tough, resilient landscape roses that perform so well for us have flowers that are nice, but nothing like the beautiful hybrid tea flowers that epitomize the ideal rose flower.

The outstanding Knock Out rose is a great example of a rose that performs like a trouper in the landscape, but has open, semi-double flowers that leave a lot to be desired in the minds of many gardeners.

However, like hybrid teas, the high-centered buds of Belinda's Dream gracefully unfurl to create an exquisitely shaped, fully double flower. This is a rose with all of the toughness and disease-resistance of Knock Out that produces the beautiful flowers so many of us crave.

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