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Gardening, Home and Nature Thread, Feb. 28

bankss flag.jpg

The photo above, of a Lady Banks' Rose not too far from where we live, is a repeat. But I thought the flag was appropriate for today. And the flag is up over the rose bush again, too. This is a prime season for lovely flowering shrubs and small trees. This rose only blooms once a year, but it stays in bloom for several weeks, and it is worth changing your traveling route a little to see it if you have one in the neighborhood. We have several in our neighborhood. Not all this big.

Wee Kreek Farm Girl first alerted us that this rose, Rosa banksiae, both the yellow one and the white one, grow in the desert, including a record-setting huge rose in Tombstone.

It's not hard to find conflicting information about this rose on the interwebs. On the North Carolina State University page, the yellow cultivar is classified as "white". Well, it's buttery, but it's not white. Though most people can't detect a fragrance from the yellow rose. Most of the other information seems OK, and there's a wonky general video about roses, too.

Many sources say that the white cultivar is fragrant, like violets. I haven't ever been able to detect a fragrance. But this rose is recommended for Central Texas, too. I think the individual flowers on the white cultivar are more distinctive than the ones on the yellow cultivar, but people seem to grow the yellow one here and the white one in Southern California. Don't know why.

Some of the roses on the plant I photographed are bigger than a quarter - not "dime-sized". Here's a close-up, with some skinny rose hips.

bank rosehip.jpg

Though early European plant explorers were known for their derring-do, I think it is true that this rose was found in a famous Chinese nursery. The wild form is single, on an even bigger plant.

Here's a photo and information on the white cultivar.

white lady banks monrovia.jpeg

The rose I photographed is hanging over a fence, with the actual plant and a protective dog on the other side. Wonder if one of these would look nice with AZ Deplorable Moron's cactus?

cactuswire.jpg

Or with 40 Miles North's freeway daisies?

frwy daisy.jpg


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Edible Gardening/Putting Things By

Sock Monkey passes a message along from his daughter: Leftists are trying to cancel Baker Creek Seeds even though they are aligned with many leftist ideals (vegans, etc.)


My daughter sent this to me and asked me to pass it on. She is a talented gardener. I am not. She has used these folks for years with great success.
They put Bible verses in their seed catalogue this year, and did fundraising for a Christian charity in Ukraine. Because of that, there is a concerted effort on reddit and bluesky to get people not to buy from them.

What a bunch of bigoted dopes.

Baker Creek specializes in heirloom and open-pollinated seeds, including seeds sourced from third world countries. They have a lot of interesting plants - veggies, herbs and flowers. Check them out.

baker creek pickl.jpg

See the blossoms and immature seeds on the dill? Perfect for pickles.

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baker creek coorn.jpg

Lots of corn varieties for different uses

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baker creek beess.jpg

Interesting advice

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baker creek zinn red.jpg

Single zinnias would probably be even better for attracting pollinators (if that is your goal). They also have those at Baker Creek.

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Gardens of The Horde

Anything going on in your garden?

Living in the North? Here are some seeds to wintersow.

winter sowing seeds epic.jpg

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Hope everyone has a nice weekend.


If you would like to send photos, stories, links, etc. for the Saturday Gardening Thread, the address is:

ktinthegarden at g mail dot com

Remember to include the nic or name by which you wish to be known at AoSHQ, or let us know if you want to remain a lurker.

*

Week in Review

What has changed since last week's thread? Gardening, Home and Nature Thread, Feb. 21


Any thoughts or questions?

I closed the comments on that post so you wouldn't get banned for commenting on a week-old post, but don't try it anyway.


Posted by: K.T. at 01:00 PM




Comments

(Jump to bottom of comments)

1 st

Posted by: Blutarski, Gradually then Suddenly at February 28, 2026 01:01 PM (cxFcK)

2 I should make a pushing up daisies joke.

Posted by: Blutarski, Gradually then Suddenly at February 28, 2026 01:04 PM (cxFcK)

3 News threads stay open between the special interest threads, as always.

Posted by: KT at February 28, 2026 01:05 PM (7vIsy)

4 Wow, what a great post! I have to go back now and re-read and check out the links! Taking a break from the Iran thing is just what I needed, thanks KT!

Posted by: Denny Crane - It's 46 Degrees Here in Western NY, Goodbye Snow! at February 28, 2026 01:06 PM (i49OE)

5 2 I should make a pushing up daisies joke.
Posted by: Blutarski, Gradually then Suddenly at February 28, 2026 01:04 PM (cxFcK)


I love JMATGC's whole 2008 album, "Caffeine, Alcohol, Sunshine, Money":

"I'm still trampling daisies even though I'm still sucking exhaust
Tough thing bout forever: it's easy to get lost

"I'm still trampling daisies even though I could be pushing them up
Nice thing about a hurricane: it eventually stops"

Jared Mees & The Grown Children - Trampling Daisies
https://youtu.be/JdK3GVzNYno

Posted by: SciVo at February 28, 2026 01:11 PM (Sy6m/)

6 The Ladybanks rose is spectacular! I read it only blooms once, so ruled her out when we moved West 10yrs ago. I have about 30 David Austins and make sure they are repeats.

Soon I will get some seeds to plant! Getting excited for spring, altho it is a couple of months away for us. I do have crocus blooming and there will be more snow, that they and daffodils and tulips bloom through.

Posted by: ChristyBlinkyTheGreat at February 28, 2026 01:12 PM (WONhk)

7 Lovely photos as always. That corn looks like it's made out of mints.

Posted by: BeckoningChasm at February 28, 2026 01:20 PM (CHHv1)

8 ChristyBlinkyTheGreat at February 28, 2026 01:12 PM

It only blooms once, but the blooms last in spring weather. It's thornless and the plant looks good all year.

Posted by: KT at February 28, 2026 01:23 PM (7vIsy)

9 KT...I used to see them blooming in MS. We have an old home on our farm that burned down 70yrs ago and they still bloom there. Along with daffodils.It is a gorgeous rose bush!

I like to pick them from summer through fall. Huge bouquets of my Austins. They are tough bushes...I buy them (from Texas) bareroot. No longer have room for them. They are monsters to prune at times, but that's all I do. I think my husband fertilizes once a year.

Posted by: ChristyBlinkyTheGreat at February 28, 2026 01:28 PM (WONhk)

10 I have an Alba rose, which only blooms once a year. It's very hardy. Not sure yet if my new rose survived. My figs did and irises are coming up. I do need to get out and plant as we've had warm days.

Posted by: Notsothoreau at February 28, 2026 01:29 PM (gQ15S)

11 I have a Rosa mundi rose which blooms only once...

Posted by: It's me donna at February 28, 2026 01:33 PM (VE6XX)

12 I have ancient farm-house roses in my yard. Moss roses, and climbing roses that I have to hack back every couple of years because they menace small children. I have various forms of "primitive" roses as well- the sort with single petals instead of multiple. I have yellow rose that I found in the thicket around the boxwood and ocean spray, and I have cut the thicket back to try to let it flourish.
I used to bring jars of roses and other flowers from the yard to put in my cubical, to bring a bit of color and life to a grey, dusty cube that only afforded me a sliver of a view of the sky if I stood up out of my chair.

Posted by: Kindltot at February 28, 2026 01:37 PM (rbvCR)

13 had one of the yellow Bank roses in the rental I used in Tucson. Beautiful display of flowers.

Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at February 28, 2026 01:38 PM (H0pbe)

14 I'm looking forward to the first crocus and daffodils appearing. The unusual long periods of subfreezing temps and the heavy ice may delay things in our area.

Posted by: JTB at February 28, 2026 01:39 PM (yTvNw)

15 Navy base in Bahrain hit by Iranian missile.

Posted by: Jack Squat Bupkis at February 28, 2026 01:41 PM (jYRYu)

16 Thanks for including the piece about attracting pollinators, something I'm always interested in, if only for the superb local honey we've been able to get at the farmers market.

Posted by: JTB at February 28, 2026 01:42 PM (yTvNw)

17 Oh, and my excitement for the week. My wife buys Fuyu persimmons by the box when they are in the stores, and last fall she found a seed. Generally they are seedless, but as you know you get a seed in them once in a while.
I stratified it in a small jar of potting soil in the crisper of the fridge (besides the bags of grafting wood) and I checked yesterday, and the seed had sprouted and has an inch long root. Time to pot it up.

since it is most likely an indeterminate persimmon, I am going to have to find a place where it is not important that it becomes as big as a gravenstien apple tree.

Posted by: Kindltot at February 28, 2026 01:44 PM (rbvCR)

18 Got our first blooming flowers today. Jonquils and Baby Sister Irises.

Posted by: olddog in mo at February 28, 2026 01:44 PM (bQ4nt)

19 I had the opportunity to see the Shady Lady in Tombstone during some time stationed in Arizona. Beautiful!

For anyone traveling to Hawaii, I also recommend visiting the Banyan Market with a 150 foot Banyan canopy.

One thing life in the military was good for, was seeing new places and sharing them with my family.

-SLV

Posted by: Shy Lurking Voter at February 28, 2026 01:48 PM (7kJyR)

20 I've ordered from Baker's before. They have unique offerings.

Posted by: Emmie at February 28, 2026 01:50 PM (FMtrg)

21 All hail the Grandmaster of Freeway Daisies.

Posted by: 40 Miles North at February 28, 2026 01:54 PM (EaLNz)

22 Quick questions -

Will deer eat Genovese Basil plants?

If Basil is a deer repellent, would parsley survive if it was in close proximity to the basil?

Posted by: mrp at February 28, 2026 01:54 PM (rj6Yv)

23 >> would parsley survive if it was in close proximity to the basil?
Not if the deer wanted fresh breath.

Posted by: 40 Miles North at February 28, 2026 01:57 PM (EaLNz)

24 KT, this is one of your bestest posts ever. Everybody loves roses!

Posted by: Eromero at February 28, 2026 01:57 PM (LHPAg)

25 That part about the attacks on Baker Creek Seeds is just another example that the Left is beyond bigotry. They are anti-life.

Posted by: JTB at February 28, 2026 01:57 PM (yTvNw)

26 Mrp, deer will eat anything, including deer-resistant plants. But you might luck out if the deer in your area are picky eaters.

Posted by: Emmie at February 28, 2026 01:59 PM (FMtrg)

27 It's grey here, with threats of rain and snow over the next couple of days. Thank you, K.T., for the lovely , cheery green growing things.

Posted by: Barkingmad59, wandering lurkette at February 28, 2026 02:10 PM (wr21C)

28 Mrp, deer will eat anything, including deer-resistant plants. But you might luck out if the deer in your area are picky eaters.
Posted by: Emmie at February 28, 2026 01:59 PM (FMtrg)
====

Thanks, Emmie. They are many, but there's plenty to eat and the neighbors have a lot of dogs. The planter will be on the front deck, so they'd have to work a bit to reach the plants.

Posted by: mrp at February 28, 2026 02:12 PM (rj6Yv)

29 Some seeds, like apples, pears, Asian pears, dogwood, camas and persimmons need a period of cold to sprout.
This is as simple as putting a bunch of seeds in a ziplock bag of dirt in the crisper of your fridge for three to four months.
I have a bunch of apple and asian pear seedlings in pots in the back yard that I started that way, and I am working a bunch of peach pits as well this year.

Posted by: Kindltot at February 28, 2026 02:17 PM (rbvCR)

30 29 Some seeds, like apples, pears, Asian pears, dogwood, camas and persimmons need a period of cold to sprout.
This is as simple as putting a bunch of seeds in a ziplock bag of dirt in the crisper of your fridge for three to four months.

Posted by: Kindltot at February 28, 2026 02:17 PM (rbvCR)

I remember my parents putting some spring bulbs (especially Iris) in the freezer for a couple weeks when we had a warm winter. Usually they just put them in a bucket near the front garage door.

-SLV

Posted by: Shy Lurking Voter at February 28, 2026 02:22 PM (7kJyR)

31 Lovely photos.

I've been busy starting seeds outside and now I'm watering three times a day because it's 90 outside.

I have herbs, corn, melons, green beans, carrots, leeks, some flowers and a lot of different types of chilis and I think that's enough.

I have the things that are supposed to be direct seeded like watermelon in little pots that you're supposed to be able to plant the whole pot in the soil and I hope they work.

Posted by: CaliGirl at February 28, 2026 02:31 PM (RjXn6)

32 FWiW CaliGirl, my wife's kid plants those sorts of starters in toilet paper rolls, cut in half to make shorter, biodegradeable cylinders.

I myself have cut the bottoms and slit up the sides of red Solo cups, and then put them inside of other red Solo cups to start tomatoes so I can just slide the inner sleeve out, and unroll the inner sleeve to directly plant the whole thing without messing it up any.


I am not sure what works best.

Posted by: Kindltot at February 28, 2026 02:46 PM (rbvCR)

33 They broke out the whiskey and Betsy got tight.
She sang and she shouted and danced o'er the plain
And showed her bare arse to the whole wagon train.

Posted by: Commissar of plenty and festive little hats at February 28, 2026 02:48 PM (Kt19C)

34 Mrp, deer will eat anything, including deer-resistant plants. But you might luck out if the deer in your area are picky eaters.
Posted by: Emmie

Ha!
But you ain't wrong.

Posted by: MkY at February 28, 2026 02:54 PM (q6tQZ)

35 Finally getting me crocus to pop their little heads out. Daffs too.

Posted by: Diogenes at February 28, 2026 02:59 PM (2WIwB)

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