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Carnations that smell like Cinnamon?

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Shaynelle

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May 10, 2005, 1:05:11 PM5/10/05
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A neighbour of mine in Vancouver (I now live in Winnipeg) had some
gorgeous carnations that came up year after year and smelled BEAUTIFUL!
They smelled very similiar to cinnamon. They did not last long if you
cut them, but they were so pretty in the ground there was little need
to cut them.

Does anyone know what species of carnation this would be? Or maybe it
wasn't a carnation, but another, very similar looking plant?

thank you!

David Ross

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May 10, 2005, 1:37:18 PM5/10/05
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Are you sure it wasn't cloves instead of cinnamon? Clove scents
are common in the Dianthus genus (pinks, so called not because of
their color but because their petals have toothed edges as if cut
with pinking shears), especially among the perennial pinks.
Carnations themselves (D. caryophyllus) are sometimes called clove
pinks.

--

David E. Ross
<URL:http://www.rossde.com/>

I use Mozilla as my Web browser because I want a browser that
complies with Web standards. See <URL:http://www.mozilla.org/>.

Callen Molenda

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May 10, 2005, 2:43:57 PM5/10/05
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"David Ross" <nob...@nowhere.not> wrote in message
news:4280F14E...@nowhere.not...

> Shaynelle wrote:
> >
> > A neighbour of mine in Vancouver (I now live in Winnipeg) had some
> > gorgeous carnations that came up year after year and smelled BEAUTIFUL!
> > They smelled very similiar to cinnamon. They did not last long if you
> > cut them, but they were so pretty in the ground there was little need
> > to cut them.
> >
> > Does anyone know what species of carnation this would be? Or maybe it
> > wasn't a carnation, but another, very similar looking plant?
> >
> > thank you!
>
> Are you sure it wasn't cloves instead of cinnamon? Clove scents
> are common in the Dianthus genus (pinks, so called not because of
> their color but because their petals have toothed edges as if cut
> with pinking shears), especially among the perennial pinks.
> Carnations themselves (D. caryophyllus) are sometimes called clove
> pinks.

I've had a carnation that smelled like cinnamon, not cloves; can't remember
the name but I think it was dianthus (the D. in the above?) something. Our
6 year old picked it out one year, and it was fairly hardy, as I recall.

Callen in VA


Vox Humana

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May 10, 2005, 4:06:09 PM5/10/05
to

"David Ross" <nob...@nowhere.not> wrote in message
news:4280F14E...@nowhere.not...
> Shaynelle wrote:
> >
> > A neighbour of mine in Vancouver (I now live in Winnipeg) had some
> > gorgeous carnations that came up year after year and smelled BEAUTIFUL!
> > They smelled very similiar to cinnamon. They did not last long if you
> > cut them, but they were so pretty in the ground there was little need
> > to cut them.
> >
> > Does anyone know what species of carnation this would be? Or maybe it
> > wasn't a carnation, but another, very similar looking plant?
> >
> > thank you!
>
> Are you sure it wasn't cloves instead of cinnamon? Clove scents
> are common in the Dianthus genus (pinks, so called not because of
> their color but because their petals have toothed edges as if cut
> with pinking shears), especially among the perennial pinks.
> Carnations themselves (D. caryophyllus) are sometimes called clove
> pinks.

The color "pink" is named after the flower..


Cheryl Isaak

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May 10, 2005, 5:39:13 PM5/10/05
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On 5/10/05 2:43 PM, in article d5qvdf$6b5$1...@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU,
"Callen Molenda" <callen...@yahoo.com> wrote:


I've had Sweet Williams that smelled more cinnamon then clove.

Any which way - it is my favorite scented flower - so refreshing!
Cheryl

Leon Trollski

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May 10, 2005, 5:34:14 PM5/10/05
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"Vox Humana" <vhu...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:Ru8ge.18905$9n1....@tornado.ohiordc.rr.com...

>
> "David Ross" <nob...@nowhere.not> wrote in message

>


> The color "pink" is named after the flower..
>
>

It's not the colour, it's the shape, after "pinking shears" used for certain
dress designs.


BearDrummer

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May 11, 2005, 12:21:11 AM5/11/05
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they are used to keep the fabric from fraying.... not just for
design... but that is neither here nor there...

Frogleg

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May 11, 2005, 5:32:31 AM5/11/05
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On 10 May 2005 10:05:11 -0700, "Shaynelle" <Shay...@gmail.com>
wrote:

Carnations (Dianthus caryophyllu) are also known as "Clove carnation"
for their distinctive scent.

Shaynelle

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May 12, 2005, 7:25:18 PM5/12/05
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Thank you everyone, I will try the Dianthus caryophyllu - the
carnations I knew of did smell like cinnamon, but its possible this is
still the correct species. They were very hardy from what I recall,
they just kept coming back year after year with very little care.

Crossing my fingers these are the ones! :)

Thanks again!
Katherine

Hoopie

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May 9, 2017, 12:14:04 AM5/9/17
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replying to Shaynelle, Hoopie wrote:
I had those in Oak Harbor WA. wonderful every year

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/garden/carnations-that-smell-like-cinnamon-36382-.htm


Tricia

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Jun 29, 2017, 8:14:05 AM6/29/17
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replying to Shaynelle, Tricia wrote:
Did you ever find it? My grandma had carnations that smelled like cinnamon.
I have been looking for years.

Ben

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Apr 7, 2021, 10:45:05 AM4/7/21
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Have you found it. Our neighbors used to comment on ours because they could smell the cinnamon at there house.

--
For full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/garden/carnations-that-smell-like-cinnamon-36382-.htm

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