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Is Buncrana rose the first of the year? 17.01.14

IT'S barely three weeks since we decked the halls with boughs of holly - but already the first roses of the year have begun to bloom.
This pretty yellow flower was photographed on Wednesday in Ethna McGrory's garden in Buncrana - the only flash of colour in a still-dull winter garden.
The baffling question is; is it the first rose of 2014 or the last rose of 2013 - or a bloom that's just bamboozled by our increasingly mixed-up seasons?
A yellow rose that bloomed this week in a Buncrana garden - barely three weeks after Christmas!
And are we coming up roses despite a succession of some of the worst Atlantic storms to hit our coastline in recent memory?
Rose breeder and hybridist, Colin Dickson, said people needn't worry about climate change in relation to roses blooming this time of year.
"Typically roses bloom in Ireland from mid-June right through the summer and into the autumn," said Mr Dickson.
"But it's not as rare an occurrence as you might think for roses to bloom in January if we’ve had a relatively mild autumn and winter. Roses will keep on blooming until the frost hits them and we've had very little frost until recently.
"That rose is the remnants of last season. It was a small bud on new stem that has been wanting to burst through. But the rose bush needs to be well cut back in early March to allow good growth this summer," added Mr Dickson of Dickson Roses in Co Down.
Pensioner Ethna said she was astonished to see the rose bush - planted by her late husband James more than 20 years ago - flower so soon after Christmas.
"The flower is very noticeable because it is the only bit of colour in the garden," she said.
Meanwhile, the earliest snowdrops for 40 years have bloomed in the National Botanic Gardens in Dublin and curators there say the first signs of Spring are already showing.
And, as new year gardeners begin to venture out post-storms, the weather forecast is mixed for the days ahead. The weekend will see some early-morning frosts and icy patches, clearing to cool, showery conditions.
The early part of next week will see cool, wet and breezy conditions by day with some frost and icy patches possible at night, according to Met Eireann.
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