Rose Breeder's Nursery: Select Roses with Brad Jalbert
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- Опубліковано 7 чер 2024
- This week I had the chance to visit with world renowned rose breeder Brad Jalbert at his nursery of 34 years: Select Roses. While it would have been nice to see the place in bloom (and I may still get the chance to make a video during the growing season) there are certain topics worth discussing in the winter season. We had a chance to talk about Brad's rose breeding selections, some garden favorites, and also to look at the damage done during this unusual winter.
Many thanks to Brad and the crew at Select Roses! Here's a link to the nursery website: www.selectroses.ca/ and here's one to their excellent UA-cam channel: / @selectroses5708
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Clearly two people who love roses looking at roses together. Please do more tours like this!
You bet. So long as I keep getting invited, I'll keep showing up
Its so great to see that two grown-ups in the same industry can have a nice conversation without it turning into a pissing contest. Well done Fraser, from Jason Valley Rose Farm.
Thanks Brad!
What a treat to see two grown men so excited about roses! I enjoyed this video so much!
Lol. Who you calling grown?
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm 😀 I could have called you old men but you're both younger than I am! lol
I’d love to see a repeat visit in the days of blooming! Love all your videos!
This video left me feeling so energized! You can just feel the excitement about roses-love it! What a great landscape Brad has for showing off the roses. And that one climbing in the tree! The cane size! It looked like a grape vine 😮
I know. If you started from the base, I'd be thinking massive wisteria or something!
Love love love this video! And to meet a rose celebrity like this is inspiring. Makes me want to get out & garden right now.
Thanks Brian. He kinda has that effect!
It amazes me that a rose grown from seed would bloom in its first year! That Red Corsair sounds like a great rambler. What an interesting tour. Thanks.
Two rose guys just hanging. Its so fun to watch two people with a shared passion chat.☆
I’ve met Brad and Jason, I love that both are willing to take the time to talk and answer questions. Two awesome people!!
Thanks so much Ian!
In UK we've just had the wettest February ever recorded, but it's been reasonably mild so a few roses carried some their foliage through the Winter, and there's been very little frost damage. I was pruning my R. Mme Alfred Carriere climber yesterday, have the R. New Dawn and one other to finish off today before they put on too much more Spring growth (if I can face the rain!). Can't wait for Spring, seems a long time coming so thanks for yet another great video to tide me over.
One of your best video tours!!! And do get Red Corsair!!!
Yes, very impressed by that variety!
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm I hope you got some cuttings!
Thank you Jason, he’s roses and garden is beautiful! 🪻💚🙃
13:44 ...... I had NO idea that roses could get so big. That climbing rose looks like a tree! WOW! 😊
The Select Roses Farm is so beautiful. Thanks Brad and Jason.
Select Rose is such a nice little nursery (retail side), and the staff are very helpful finding the right kind of rose for your needs. Highly recommended! Thanks for the tour with Brad!
Quite welcome!
It feels like I just went on a Rose garden tour with two nicest gentlemen. Lovely vibe♡ Thanks from Australia
Nice of you to say Luna! Thanks for watching
Thanks for the field trip!!! Yes please later in the season if possible. I watched an old video of his and that convinced me to get my own laguna. Thanks so much for the videos!!!!❤
I have been hoping for a long time that you would feature Brad in one of your videos! So thrilled to see this pop up in my feed. I really look forward to you going back when the roses are in bloom.
I have 3 roses bred by Brad Jalbert and they are gorgeous. Nice to see Canadian rose breeders get attention.
Thanks Christina - he definitely deserves the recognition.
Man, this is a new place on the “destinations” map
Well worth the visit!
Brad is wonderful! I’ve been shopping with him for years! Great video 😊
I never knew a rose would have blooms on it. It's first year. I like learning new things even at my age your never to old to learn. Thanks for sharing
Thank you for the fantastic field trip!
Double Ambre bred by Brad is one of my favorite Canadian roses.
Thanks! I'll have to keep my eyes open for it.
That was enjoyable, Jason.
Wow Lovely Planting
Thank you for good sharing 😊 LIKE 560
My friend, have a good relationship 😊
Thanks for this video. I love Roses❤.
So much fun!
That was great. I am inspired by the rose in the tree. So very cool. Thanks to you both!
I have to admit, I'm rethinking my stance on Kiftsgate
I like roses that grow on their own roots. They are tougher than grafted ones especially in cold winters.
Thanks - for sure! With a fully hardy own-root rose (like the Explorer series for example) it's nice to know that you won't have a situation where the top graft has died off and what's remaining is a different rootstock.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Interesting. I grew up in Bavaria, Germany where it can get very cold. My grandpa explained to me that he grew only Kordes roses cause they used especially hardy root roses to graft tea hybrids on and this was his only chance to grow all these modern roses in his garden. He had a wonderful "Gloria Dei" which he loved dearly.
I planted my first two own-root roses from cuttings two weeks ago and so far they look very promising, but we had a very mild winter as of now.
Such great information! Thanks Jason 😊
Thanks Vicki!
Great video,looking forward to your return visit .😊
Thanks Diane
Thank you.
Very much my pleasure. Thanks for watching!
Great Vid! the part about black stems was really helpful!
Fascinating!
Thanks!
Thank you so much for all the information perfect timing I'm going to add some roses in my garden
Drooling over 'Our Anniversary'!
Wow so happy to watch brad jalbert😍
Hi Jason, it was really helpful seeing the black stems. I have two David Austin climbing roses, which I bought as bare root. I have them in large containers. I have noticed some blacking on 1 or 2 stems. I thought that I had killed them. So many thanks 😊 😊
I'm so glad it helped Pauline
I’m only a few mins into the video but I think the not the best timing to see the nursery comment means another tour in the summer??? *wishful thinking?*
Wish I lived closer! But at least we have Palatine in Ontario.
And Palatine is wonderful to visit from what I hear. When I was doing the intro I was trying to think of where there'd be comparable specialty nurseries for roses. I doubt there's much in the prairies, but there's Corn Hill in NB
I’ll be sure to visit if I do a road trip to the east coast!
A trip to Niagara Falls is incomplete without a stop at Palatine tbh. And they have the best apple cider too.
😊 Nice!
Jason, I always enjoy your informative and beautiful videos. It is amazing how many lovely roses there are. Thank you for sharing.
My pleasure. Thanks for watching
Interesting tour👍🏻
Thanks Michael.
Thanks for a really interesting video Fraser and Jason, I really enjoyed it. I can see I can get 'As Good As It Gets' here in the U.K. so I shall be getting one. Looks like someone's got a lot of pruning to do shortly. Never a dull moment although I didn't like the sound of -22'C! P.
Thanks Peter. I'll definitely be making space for it in my garden as well
Very cool!
Thanks Kathleen!
I saw Jason's video from about 5 years ago for the Julia Child Floribunda. Great rose that we attempted here in Central Texas. Our area's biggest rose issues (beyond Rose Rosette) are black spot and to a lesser extent rust. From March thru mid-July, the three bushes we had of Julia Child looked spectacular. They even survived a massive hail storm of near tennis ball sized hail in mid-April (unusual). During the replacement of our roof in early July, the contractor covered our shrubs, including the Julia Childs, for protection. It was a fairly hot and humid day that required them to go slow and leave the rose bushes covered for many hours. Less than two weeks after the roof work, black spot showed up on the Julia Childs. I tried physically removing the infected leaves, but that just ended up defoliating most of the bushes. I really wish I could grow them again, but Central Texas is no friend to most roses, including those deemed to have good to excellent disease resistance. Having them covered during the roof work was probably not a fair test.
I wonder if the Griffith Buck roses might be a reasonable try, as I think they were bred for Texas.
I wish we can grow that in the Philippines😢🙏
I would love to visit our nursery WOW! Cheers from Ottawa.
Thanks Giorgio!
❤wow....nice n clear weather 😊unlike Northern CA & a very wet Rose hills at San Diego now .
I feel you. It's pretty mixed up our way as well. I had to dump a bit of footage because of wind noise, and we're still expecting some cool & wet over the next week.
If it makes you feel any better, it hailed then snowed here last night, falling on daffodils in bloom (I live in the same region as Select Roses and Fraser Valley Rose Farm). We've had a roller coaster ride weather wise this winter.
That blizzard was nasty but, it spared The Sierra's residents. My friend in Arkansas said , the plum & cherry blossoms are already blooming there so, springtime unlike the cold, wintery Northern CA & a wet...wet... Southern CA.
Those Heirloom roses at Oregon must be in trouble now as not all roses are sheltered in a safe greenhouses.
Malaysia is under a heatwave now due to El Nino, so many of my friends are reporting of phyto burn & died back problems now on their roses.
I only pruned my roses half way due to the risk.Least , l hope not to add more stress to them.
Hails came down too on certain part of the USA now, so be wary of sudden frost & canker risk ya. Good luck!
I saw that some Korean farmer protected their crops by installing small cover greenhouse from pvc pipes & plastic with insulated soil ....cabels on heater was on for frost protection. It may work on rose stumps in dormancy...they will think it's already springtime :) time to wake up & flower :)
we need a scoop on rambling roses. mind blown
For sure!
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm also one of my fav vids i've seen. totally inspired--will be buying some... & I had no idea the Jalbert roses were developed in Canada. So proud and awesome to see.
Great video. It seems that most of the roses with winter damage were on their own rootstock, not grafted. My understanding is, if the top died, you may just be left with vigorous growth from the rootstock; perhaps not what you hoped for.
We definitely saw damage on both own-root and grafted roses. When you say "own rootstock" I'm assuming you mean own-root, where there should be no issue with a genetically different growth from below the ground. It's the grafted ones where this is an issue.
would it be great some hints on growing ramblers (are those left on their own without any pruning, other than maybe a light tiding?) , since by growing so quickly they can make a statement in a garden
Hi Jason, Could you please ask Mr Jalbert to sell more of his roses in US? We don’t want to buy from Chamblee’s under the new ownership and One Love Rose and Gardens because they defraud customers without sending roses and no refunds. Heirloom is good but they don’t sell bare roots.
I was lucky to get Double Ambre bare root from Jackson & Perkins and totally Love it! There is a high demand here for his roses for sure.
Thanks. I'll see what else he has in the works. I know he sells some of his through Palatine as well.
❤❤❤❤
It's actually quite fascinating how roses adapt and many times even mutate, especially with self seeding.
Last winter my roses went into a full dormant state at 4C, this year they seem to have deciced on being year round bloomers. Of course during the Pineapple Express or some call the tropical Pacific river, the temperatures were warmer than normal by 20 degrees on average for 3 weeks during our coldest time of year.
The unfortunate part is, aphids and thrips have exploded, so I will be cutting everything back to about 6 inches over the next week.
I was going to just let everything go and see what happens, but as soon as a bud begins to develop the insects just swarm, so everything must go, along with cleaning any leaves, debris, and mulch, then cover everything in a layer of sand to hold moisture and hopefully deter the pests. At least the beneficials are increasing in numbers and soon the chamomile and other plants will be flowing to increase their food supply.
Thanks for the tour, it nice to see someone else not afraid to be drastic when necessary.👌😂🤙
It can be tough for the plants to not have a natural break/rest between seasons to sanitize and start clean - makes sense to pick one yourself and just make it fit (even if a bit arbitrary!)
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm
I agree.
Beautiful! Where is this and when does it open? We're only 45min from the BC border thinking this would be an ideal weekend trek. I can think of a few places to add some lovely roses
I think they open this weekend. Just a word on the border though: usually you'll need to arrange a phytosanitary inspection to get plants across the border.
@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you for letting me know! Border questions are so hard to be answered these days with all the automation ..
Ever have a problem with Japanese Beetles. I live in zone 4 in Canada.
Ditto from this zone 4 gardener. I cannot grow a rose that won’t get destroyed by Japanese bottles or earwigs!!
Not yet here - I've heard they've been observed in Vancouver, but not yet in the Valley in large numbers.
This may not be the most opportune place to ask, but if we are talking about rose nurseries, and I was looking for climbing roses, what do the width numbers on the tags mean?
I am looking to put a couple behind some short hydrangeas to trellis onto my home's wall, but when I see climbing roses that get 15'+ x 5'+, I read that as they are too wide to put in my beds because I think of 5+' around like a bush. Is this width only horizontal or does it also meant the distance away from the wall as well?
It depends a lot on your training, but I'd take it more as a width the rose will take when trained relatively flat against the trellis or wall
So is there a place to buy rose seeds or do you half to get them from your own roses?
I've seen some of the species seeds available (rugosa, canina, hugonis, etc.) and those may be worthwhile. I'd stick away from the Ebay seeds as sketchy.
Have Japanese beetles hit ur area yet? If so. What do u do to keep them from destroying ur roses?
Not in any major way yet
They moved in on us 3 yrs ago. Devastation for 2 months
I was recently reading a few plant tags on some things that I was overwintering and it said that propagation was prohibited. Is that just a legal warning that has no backing? how can somebody stop you from cloning a plant? Do they indeed own the genetic rights to the plant? It seems like a warning with no way to really back it up. Just wondered what your thoughts might be.
It's more or less just for commercial propagation - I do have a video on plant patents, but the home gardener can pretty much ignore the issue.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm which video is that about the plant parents? Is that the title? I would certainly like to see it. I enjoy all of your videos. You are my favorite plant personality on UA-cam by far.
It's a lot older so apologies for the presentation, but here it is: ua-cam.com/video/940Plg82sfM/v-deo.html
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm it is a really great informative video. Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us. I always appreciate having a good teacher.
I'm glad we have no voles here. Nothing to repel them?
It's not such an easy problem to deal with. There are some repellants that gardeners use (castor oil, hot pepper, etc) but even if they work, you'd have to keep reapplying. A fine wire mesh barrier can be placed around plants, but that's a lot of work, and it also has to extend a little above the soil, so it's kinda ugly too!
Voles?
Yes @intanbaharuddin2703 little rodents that like to nibble at underground plant parts.
Owh...l do have big rat coming in my garden but, they don't disturb my roses probably l.dumped fermented red onions juice & mint compost as repellant.
It nibbled my turmeric rhizomes though.
-22C? Burrrr!
Yes. Happily, not for long, but it did leaves some damage behind!
Voles 😖
Grrr!