May 2019

These posts originally appeared on my Facebook blog ‘Rose of the Day’

1st May

The French nursery of Meilland is known worldwide for the roses they have bred over the last century. Today they sell over twelve million rose bushes annually across the world. Possibly their most famous rose is the Hybrid Tea ‘Peace’ bred by Francis Meilland just before WWII. Today’s rose is a more recent introduction, 2006, and carries the exhibition name ‘Francis Meilland’, and the ICRA appellation MELtroni. Several alias names, in France ‘Schloss Ippenburg’ named for a north German castle which hosts several garden events each year. Other names include ‘Alexandre Pouchkine’, ‘Father of Peace’, ‘My Garden’, ‘Pretty Woman’, ‘Prince Jardinier’. One must wonder why one name is not enough!

Whatever the name this is a superb rose. Winner of numerous awards in particular the Royal Horticultural Society ‘Award of Garden Merit’ and the prestigious German ADR (Allgemeine Deutsche Rosenneuheitenprüfung) rose trials. This latter award means this rose has exceptional disease resistance, and hardiness together with being an exceptional garden rose.

Rather old fashioned large blooms of blush pink, he can be pinker than in the photograph, open from pointed creamy pink buds on long stems.  Full petalled with a charming central swirl like an ice cone topped with a strong rich fruity fragrance. He cleanly drops his old blooms, white roses sometimes like to cling onto their spent blooms which is not an elegant look! Flushes of bloom throughout the summer.

A tall rose, usually around 1.10m but in a warm climate, she will be taller up to 2m. Narrow though so he will fit into a small space. Large dark glossy foliage and absolutely ideal for the no spray garden. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b.

I am not a fan of white Hybrid Tea roses as they can be so bright and perfect, they have an artificial feel. The soft blush pink saves ‘Francis Meilland’ from this icy appearance. A beautiful rose in all respects.

Thursday 2nd May

A tale involving several roses today. Back in the dark winter on 25th January, the superb Noisette rose ‘Mme Alfred Carrière’ was featured as Rose of the Day. Bred by the very talented rose breeder Joseph Schwartz in Lyon. He died very young at the age of just 39 in 1885 with 60 or so roses to his name, leaving his widow Marie-Louise to carry on the family rose growing business. She appears to have been an equally talented rose hybridizer introducing 52 roses and two found roses, the unique ‘Roger Lambelin’ and today’s rose ‘Mme Ernest Calvat’. Another rose makes a brief appearance here, the Bourbon ‘Mme Isaac Pereire,’ one of my favourite roses. Early in her career, Mme Isaac produced a ‘sport’, ‘Mme Ernest Calvat’ perhaps discovered but certainly cultivated and introduced by Marie Louise in 1888. 

‘Mme Ernest Calva’t, you may also find her listed as ‘Mme Ernst Calvat,’ resembles her parent Mme Isaac in every way except colour. The rich crimson magenta is replaced by a soft pink with paler outer petals. The blooms are equally as large and blowsy and have the same intoxicating scent. Vigorous, almost too vigorous to be honest. I grow Mme Isaac as a pillar type rose, I have wound her long stems around the pillar support of a large square pergola. This method ensures I can see and smell the blooms rather than these growing up so high and only appreciated by the swallows as they swoop into their nests. The opposite corner of the pergola has a Passion Flower Vine, although pretty this is far too strong growing for the position. Tired of removing her tendrils from my chair daily she is doomed for removal, so I am tempted to put Mme Ernest in her place. The mother and daughter side by side, the crimson and the pink would be very pleasing, I think.

Mme Ernest can be plagued with black spot, so she is not ideal for the no spray garden. If you grow her as a climber then you need to be a constant gardener for her, tying in and pulling down her stems. This ensures the buds break along the stem not just at the ends. I don’t know the extent that she suffers from ugly early bloom ‘proliferation’ like her parent. This is where the gene switches in the DNA have a bit of a moment producing a stem and foliage in the centre of the bloom. These blooms can be removed, and later blooms are generally unaffected. Blooms almost continuously through the summer. The foliage has a purple tinge, a perfect foil for the pale pink blooms.

Who was Mme Ernest Calvat? Other than she was the wife of the mayor of Grenoble who owned a glove making company, and was fond of Chrysanthemums I can find no information. Was she pretty and petite or a large flamboyant lady like her rose?

A hardy tough rose, USDA zone 4b-10b. Scoring 8.1 from the American Rose Society -a solid to very good rose, its good features easily outweigh any problems, well above average. I think I agree in principle with this rating. Widely available.

If you have the space together with the time and inclination to tinker with her long stems this is a delicious, outrageous and superb rose that will give you and your garden visitors joy and happiness.

Friday 3rd May

David Austin believed his English Roses had one defining characteristic which was ‘grace.’ Today’s rose is named for this accolade ‘Grace.’

‘Grace’ certainly has this special quality being elegant, and charming with a certain style. Introduced in 2005 she is a medium sized rose, up to 1.20m and around the same width with a good bushy growing habit. Fat pink buds appear in clusters, opening initially to a smallish cupped bloom of a strong apricot hue. As the bloom flattens it gains size revealing more petals with an attractive pointed shape. The colour is the softest creamy peach flushed with pink with paler guard petals, so delicate. She can vary in colour being more intense in the heat, almost tangerine. The blooms have an overall rather shaggy untidy appearance, but this adds rather than detracts to her charm. Strong ‘tea’ fragrance’ and she reliably repeat blooms all summer until the first winter frosts.

David Austin’s catalogue describes her as a ‘florists’ rose which, to me, is puzzling. Florists roses are those grown commercially in greenhouses, characterised by long thornless stems usually with a single bloom on each stem, generally not great on the fragrance front. I recently saw some roses named ‘Florist’s Pink’, also white and red, for sale in a local nursery. These were not the commercial florist varieties being small shrubs with clusters of bloom and reputedly with good fragrance. No idea of their correct variety names, I rather cynically think these roses are ‘renamed’ for marketing purposes. Returning to ‘Grace’ she doesn’t seem to make a good cutting rose as the blooms don’t last when cut.

Foliage is a good light green, typically DA. Good disease resistance reported. Gained an ‘8’ from the American Rose Society – ‘a solid to very good rose, its good features easily outweigh any problems, well above average’. Hardy USDA 6b-9b but I see she grows well in zones 10 and 11. Widely available as both a shrub and as a standard.

Saturday 4th May

Slowly my garden is producing ‘camera ready ’roses but after the hot Easter we now have cold but sunny weather, so my roses are declining to open. Therefore, this morning we revisit the National Collection of Pre-1900 roses at Mottisfont Abbey Gardens in Hampshire and meet ‘Madame Louis Lévêque’.

One of the most beautiful ‘Moss’ roses although she is only slightly ‘mossed’, some authorities consider her to be a ‘Hybrid Perpetual’.  Her clusters of plump round buds with long feathery sepals are covered in ‘moss’ but this lacks the strong balsam fragrance usual in this class of roses. These fat pink buds produce very large fat pink blooms. Very full petalled globular blooms with a mid pink centre swirl of crumpled petals surrounded by soft pale silvery guard petals. Can be over 10cm in diameter, very impressive particularly as they stand erect above the foliage on red prickle coated stems. A rose that shouts ‘Look! At! Me!’ across a garden. Draw closer and the rich heavy fragrance will completely capture your senses. Flushes of bloom throughout the summer. A superb rose but she is a dry weather lady as these fabulous blooms will ‘ball’ in the damp weather. Small prickly hips but not as beautiful or as consistent as her bloom production.

Attractive soft green foliage, perfectly complimenting those blooms. Healthy with good disease resistance as well. Hardy USDA zones 4a and warmer. I see that she is a great performer in Australia and can be a large shrub. In Britain she tops out at around 1.2m so would suit a small garden. American Rose Society rating 8.0 – a solid to very good rose, its good features easily outweigh any problems, well above average. Her only issue is that propensity to ‘ball’.

A very smart rose but one should expect this as she was bred in Paris! From the Ivry sur Seine nursery of Louis Lévêque et Fils, I guess this nursery is long buried under houses and offices. René Lévêque, a head gardener at Versailles, established his own nursery in 1840 and was succeeded by his son Louis around 1860. Louis introduced three roses bearing the name ‘Madame Louis Lévêque,’ a pink Hybrid Perpetual in 1873, a yellow Tea in 1892 and this Moss rose in 1898. I wonder if he was so in love with his wife that he just had to dedicate lovely roses to her. Perhaps these naming’s were an attempt to calm troubled waters after some indiscretion? History doesn’t relate and I have a cynical mind.

If you live in a damp humid climate then Mme Louis won’t suit but elsewhere, she is a rose that is well worth including in your garden. Comments and questions as always welcome.

5th May

Sir Joseph Banks (1743-1820) was both a planter hunter and a sponsor of other plant hunters sent to newly discovered parts of the world to bring back garden worthy plants. Around eighty species of plants carry his name. He had a wife Dorothea who it is said was a ‘little China mad.’ She collected porcelain, so much so that it was stored in a barn.

Today’s rose carries the Banks name – ‘Rosa banksiae lutea’ or ‘Lady Banks Rose’. A fragile delicate rose that is another herald of spring. Collected in China by John Parks for Royal Horticultural Society and introduced in 1824. Named for Dorothea who was charmed by this rose. Whether it replaced the love of porcelain we don’t know.

Dorothea Hugesson,Lady Banks 1789 – John Russell RA

If you collect so much porcelain or anything else, you may well have a barn for storage. That’s good as you will need something the size of a barn for ‘Lady Banks’. This is a very large rambling rose, she will reach 7m easily. Slightly tender so a frost free climate or a warm south facing wall is also required. Other than that, this is a rose to be left to do her thing in her own time, and also at her own pace. She only begins to bloom on old wood, that is two to three year old wood continuing for around five years before that wood is too old. This presents a pruning challenge as you will probably need to control the growth but if you are too heavy handed then you won’t have any blooms. The experts recommend the occasional removal of old wood.

Thornless, a boon for pruning, and almost evergreen with shiny small healthy foliage. She may drop her leaves in very wintry weather. In April dozens and dozens of tiny clusters of green balls appear along the stems. Slowly these bud balls swell becoming yellow with the appearance of mimosa buds. As the sun warms these little globes, they pop open revealing a small semi double butter gold bloom. Rather fluffy looking at just 2 or 3cm diameter, beautiful individually but en masse they are stupendous. Hanging stems are covered with these, just amazing and rather un rose like really. She has an ethereal delicate fragrance released only in the warmth of the sun.

Widely available. She holds an RHS AGM (Award of Garden Merit). Disease free, she doesn’t mind poor soil and is drought resistant. Hardy USDA zones 6b and warmer. If you live in 6b and colder you can tuck her into a sheltered sunny corner and cross your fingers. In warm climes she is tremendous, I have seen her romping through trees in the South of France in March.

If you have the space and the climate do consider her. She blooms once only in a glorious buttery yellow flush of bloom, but the small fresh green glossy foliage is attractive in its own way.

Tuesday 7th May

Maintenance of my herbaceous borders is a bit of a time issue, not enough hours in the day for me. I am gradually filling them with roses rather than fickle herbaceous plants that either fail or attempt a takeover of the entire border. I will put a weed suppressant mat around each rose and liberally mulch so that should fix the weeds. There is a space for a white rose and last week at the Peter Beales nursery I spent some time deliberating over two white single roses, ‘Jacqueline du Pré’ or ‘Sally Holmes’. Jacqueline with her crimson stamens won the day so I left the lovely Sally behind. However, being a great rose she is today’s rose of the day.

Bred by an amateur rose breeder Robert Holmes who produced a handful of roses, just nine to his name. ‘Sally Holmes’, named for his wife, is probably the best known. Introduced way back in the hot summer of 1976 Sally is classified as a Hybrid Musk. Her seed parent was a semi double white Floribunda ‘Ivory Fashion’ with the prepotent Hybrid Musk ‘Ballerina’ providing the pollen.

Imagine the large clusters of bloom typical of ‘Ballerina’ but instead of small pink edged white blooms you have the white of ‘Ivory Fashion’ plus her bloom size. That’s ‘Sally Holmes’! The copious clusters of buds are an attractive pale coral pink turning lemon white as they open to a white five petalled bloom with a large golden stamen crown. One for the bees and other pollinating insects. The mature blooms have nicely reflexed petals as in the photograph and last a long time before they drop. Long lasting as a cut flower as well, unusual for a single rose. Her fragrance is light and musky, some reports no fragrance at all, but these light fragrances are enlivened by warmth although the hot sun burns the perfume away. Pick your moment to breathe her scent. An exceptionally reliable repeat flowering rose from early summer through to late autumn.

Here in Britain, she can be around 1.75m high but can easily reach 3m + in a warmer climate where she can be grown as a climber. Good dark glossy foliage but a few reports of black spot susceptibility so watch her carefully. Holder of the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit. The American Rose Society rating is a stupendous 8.8 – An outstanding rose, one with major positive features and only minor negatives. The top 1%. Praise indeed!

Perhaps I need to find another space for a white rose in those herbaceous borders after all.

Wednesday 8th May

Today a rose who is unsure of her identity, or to be more correct the experts debate her true identity. The name this peerless rose carries is ‘Enfant de France’, child of France.

Clémence Latray introduced a Hybrid Perpetual ‘Enfant de France’ in 1860 on the eve of the birth of the Hybrid Tea. A prolific producer of roses, around 85 including the magnificent ‘Boule des Neige’. The name ‘Enfant de France’ is also attached to a Gallica and an Alba, additionally, there is an ‘Enfant de France Nouveau’. To be honest she isn’t the only rose that has appeared on this blog with queries over her name and origin and I doubt she will be the last. Should you order ‘Enfant de France’ you will receive the rose I am discussing this morning.

She is a rose that really should be more widely grown. Repeat blooms so quickly as to be continuous. Extremely healthy, and tolerant of extreme heat and cold. Responding well to care and good cultivation she will cope with poor soil and some neglect.

Round pink buds with long feather like sepals, I find these more attractive than just plain buds! At first, a pale pink globular bloom quickly opens out to a very full flat bloom stuffed with petals and quills, those small thin central petals, all arranged in a quartered form. Classic silvery pink outer petals with rich rose pink inner petals which often have large splodges of darker pink. These petals reflex well as she matures often revealing her small button eye as the bloom becomes almost pompom like. The most luxurious heavy old rose fragrance, unforgettable as it rises in the heat of a hot June day. I photographed her on such a day at Mottisfont Abbey gardens last summer. She holds her stunning blooms, either singly or in clusters, up above the copious foliage. Truly a fabulous sight.

For a classic Pre-1900s rose she is on the small side, just 1m on her tiptoes here in Britain. Warmer climates encourage her to be somewhat taller but never invasive. Given her accommodating growth habits, she could happily inhabit a large container. She really is one of the roses that I look at and think ‘Why bother with some of the poorer performing modern roses?’ Sticking my neck out I consider she surpasses some of the David Austin roses.

The American Rose Society award her a rather mean 8.0 only, a solid to excellent rose, its good features easily outweigh any problems. I can’t think of a problem with this rose but perhaps some American bug snacks voraciously on her? Comments welcome as always.

You won’t be disappointed if you plant ‘Enfant de France’. She is a worthy addition to any rose garden.

Thursday 9th May

An early David Austin rose today, introduced in 1969 the semi double ‘Canterbury’. One of the very first ‘English Roses’ with repeat blooming, the others being ‘Wife of Bath’, ‘Chaucer’, The Prioress’, and ‘The Knight’. All names taken from the tales of Chaucer, David Austin was a great lover of English poetry. The first rose introduced by David Austin was the shrub/climber ‘Constance Spry’ who is the pollen parent of ‘Canterbury’. The seed parent is a lovely pink Hybrid Tea ‘Monique’. ‘Constance Spry’ blooms just the once so ‘Monique’ ensured that ‘Canterbury’ would repeat bloom through the summer.

I am rather fond of these early DA roses, the more recent ones are of too uniform appearance to appeal to me. ‘Canterbury’ begins her show of bloom with bright pink HT like buds opening to very large peachy pink semi double blooms with large golden glowing stamen coronas. These really do look like small suns. Silky petals with creamy pink backs, and an attractive ruffled appearance. These fade to pale pink; the photo shows her just slightly past her peak. The foliage is rather dark accentuating the pink glow of the blooms. Not over fragranced but a light sweet perfume.

David Austin writes in his book ‘The English Roses’ that this first tranche of ‘English Roses’ had the old rose beauty he desired but were rather weak growers and prone to disease. He reflects that these may have introduced to the public too early, popular but with a certain reputation for being subject to disease.  In Britain ‘Canterbury’ was a slow grower taking time to build into a sizeable shrub. I did grow her way back loving the blooms before giving up as she seemed to struggle to grow more than about 40cm high. However, move her to Australia and you have a very different rose. Much more vigorous reaching 1.5m, more bloom both in quantity and repeat and not so much disease, if any at all. At the weekend when researching her I was not able to find a stockist in Britain. A few in Europe, lots in the States and Australia. She no longer appears in the David Austin catalogue though.

I feel in our cooler climate ‘Canterbury’ is more of a collector’s piece but am interested to hear from anyone who still grows her here.

Friday 10 May

I am increasing fond of Tea roses which is difficult living in an area not best suited to them. I do not have quite enough warm sheltered spots here plus it is a windy site. However, driven to clear up the stable yard beside the house, it was fast becoming a dumping ground for bits of garden equipment, a plan germinated. Here is my perfect sunny sheltered spot. True the roses would have to grow in containers but there is enough room for large ones.

This morning’s rose may well be a contender except I cannot yet find a stockist in the UK but my favourite Dutch nursery stocks this and other Tea roses.. Today’s rose is considered to be in the top group of Tea roses, ‘Marie van Houtte’.

Bred by Jean-Claude Ducher, a prolific rose breeder with over 90 roses to his name.  ‘Marie van Houtte’, introduced in 1871, is possibly one of his better known varieties. A cross between two Tea roses still in popular cultivation, ‘Mme de Tartas’ x ‘Mme Falcot’

Characteristic Tea buds, that elegant urn shape, which are a creamy colour but stroked with touches of pink. These unfurl into a large cupped loose petalled bloom of deep cream, think of the cream from Jersey cows and you have the colour. The petals attractively reflex, curling backwards, as the bloom opens. The magic then commences, the hot sun touches these creamy blooms a faint wash of pink appears on the petal edges and then suffuses across the petal. Becoming darker pink with the sun’s rays, a phenomena seen in other Tea and China roses. Whether this is heat or ultraviolet has not been established. Whatever the biochemistry here one ends up with a wonderful sight. The creamy buds, the deep cream young blooms scrolling their petals touched with pink and the older blooms of a brighter pink with cream petal bases. Hybrid Tea roses are supposed to be perfection in shape, but the softer petal arrangement of the Tea rose is sublime.

Just when you think she can’t get any better bury your nose into these colour changing blooms. A strong ‘Tea’ fragrance, the ‘Tea’ escapes me more like a woody spicy earthy mysterious perfume. Oh, and nearly forgot she blooms practically continuously! Foliage is large leaved rather matte but very disease resistant. ‘Marie’ declines the secateurs treatment, just let her grow with a light ‘trim’ to keep her tidy. She can reach up to 2.5m in warm climes but will be smaller in chillier areas. One of the hardier of the Teas though and she grows like most of the Teas easily from cuttings. If someone in the UK has her perhaps, I can beg a cutting??

USDA hardy zones 7b and warmer. The Americans clearly love her as she scores an 8.3 – a very good to excellent rose, one recommended without hesitation.

Saturday 11th May

I have a house containing far too many books. Every room including the bathroom has a collection. They overflow the bookcases, getting stacked in piles on top of bookshelves and the floor of the spare bedrooms. Last weekend the weather was vile, wet, and very windy, so I redecorated our bedroom. This involved emptying the overstuffed bookcase, and piling books along the landing with a promise to my husband to reduce the numbers. Some were easy to let go of, others trickier. I picked up the volumes of Proust’s Remembrance of Things Past asking myself ‘Will I ever read this again?’ I probably read it once forty years ago and enjoyed it but one’s taste changes over time. The volumes didn’t go to the charity shop hover in a pile on the floor of my study, a kind of halfway house, before I am hard hearted enough to get rid of them. Pondering on which rose to feature for today I happened upon ‘Souvenir de Marcel Proust’ so here he is.

From the great French nursery of Delbard, this Floribunda rose was introduced in 1992, a rose that has withstood a fair change in rose fashion, and is still a popular choice. Interesting parentage as the famous and prepotent ‘Peace’ features on both the seed and the pollen side providing around 43% of the DNA. I wouldn’t want a horse with that much inbreeding, but this back crossing is fairly common in plant breeding. ‘Peace’ is a very healthy strong rose and passes these attributes to this child ‘‘Souvenir de Marcel Proust’.

Clusters of lemon buds open to globular full petalled blooms of intense lemon yellow. The blooms really look good enough to eat. The attractive swirl of quartered petals with lighter guard petals looks like an exotic dessert. The perfume is wonderful, strong citrus like. Delbard claims that this rose and ‘Chartreuse de Parme’ are their most strongly fragranced roses. Flushes of bloom all summer.

Healthy glossy foliage, excellent disease resistance. Not too large just 80cm to 1m in height so an excellent choice for both the no spray garden and a small garden. Hardy to -15C according to the Delbard website but others have him at USDA zone 7b and warmer. Widely available.

Now those books! The keeper’s shelf or the secondhand book shop box?

Sunday 12th May.

When I married and came to live here on the farm, I found a climbing rose had been planted by the front door as recommended by a local nursery. If ever there was a bad recommendation for a busy entrance with not so much space it was today’s rose, the Bracteata Hybrid ‘Mermaid’.

A stunning rose but one with some health warnings. She has the world’s most vicious red hooked thorns and is planted as a burglar and vandal deterrent. A front door is not an appropriate place for her unless you wish for no visitors. ‘Mermaid’ can be a slow starter but once in her stride little stops her. 5m high and probably wider is a good estimate, she needs to be in a wild area scrambling up a tree or covering an eyesore building. Larger of course in warmer climates. You can train her but only when the stems are young and flexible otherwise, they snap off when handled. She can easily overrun a tree, or a building so think carefully before you plant her. She hates to be pruned. This is a rose you plant and just leave alone.

Bred by the famous Hertfordshire nursery of William Paul and Sons. Her seed parent is the species Rosa Bracteata and the pollen parent is an unnamed yellow Tea rose. From these two unlikely parents, this beautiful rose was born and introduced in 1917.

I think her blooms must be the largest of the single roses, at least 12cm plus in diameter. A soft creamy yellow with a bright golden yellow petal base. The very best stamen crown ever, I think. Long wisps of gold retain their colour for a long time, even after the petals have dropped. The bees adore this rose. She can be a little slow to start blooming but as with her growth habit once she has started then she is practically continuously in bloom until the first frosts. Light sweet fragrance. Just such a magnificent rose.

Dark glossy leaves with light undersides, this foliage is almost evergreen except when she is grown in cold climates. Completely disease resistant, which is good given her size! As I have mentioned she dislikes pruning but you can remove branches that are overtaking the planting site. Wear very strong gloves and watch your eyes!

My mother in law and I had an uneasy relationship, to put it mildly. She told me that ‘Mermaid’ needed pruning as it was all over the place. I told her that this was a semi species rose that resented pruning, but it wasn’t that out of control. One day while I was out my MIL arrived for a couple of days and pruned her hard. I arrived home to a huge mound of prunings and a few hacked about stems. We did not need any ice in that evening’s gins and tonic I can tell you. That was the end of poor ‘Mermaid’ as she quietly died. Looking back on this sorry tale this rose was in the wrong place and would probably have had to be removed at some point, but I could have enjoyed her for a few more years. Madame Alfred Carrière replaced her by the door but I haven’t replanted ‘Mermaid’.  We have a belt of ash trees that are slowly dying from the ash dieback fungus so these will be removed within the next few years. When the fungus first arrived in the UK seven or eight years ago, I pinched a section of horse paddock in front of the ash trees and planted a belt of walnut trees. When the ash trees are removed, I plant to fill the space with species roses that can rampage around to their heart’s content. ‘Mermaid’ will be one of them.

Tuesday 14th May

Spring at last after last week’s cold winds, torrential rain, and hail. The sun has been shining here for two days so my roses are beginning to unfurl their buds. A spring rose today with an appropriate name ‘Frühlingsmorgen’- Spring Morning. I am cheered by her simple blooms as summer is not too far behind her.

Her small cream and raspberry pink buds slowly open as the early spring sun warms them. I impatiently checked her yesterday morning, but the buds were sealed shut. First thing this morning they were slightly unfurled but by lunchtime, she had just two open blooms for me to photograph. Medium size blooms of this lovely bright pink fading down the petal to white then a lemon base. A circlet of long crimson stamens with a real glow about them.

Frühlingsmorgen’ is a German bred rose from the Kordes nursery. Introduced in the middle of WWII – 1941, I always find this introduction date surprising but there are a few roses introduced during this period of war even though many rose nurseries stopped rose production, concentrating on growing food instead.

There are seven other roses with the ‘Frühlings’ prefix, I have ‘Frühlingsgold’ who will be appearing shortly, I hope. These are all of the Hybrid Spinnosissima group, the pollen parent being Rosa. spinosissima var. altaica. Extensively used in breeding with 1,219 descendants all with good blooms and quite often her rather unrose like fragrance, somewhere between violet and a rose. ‘Frühlingsmorgen’ has this unusual fragrance which I think smells different each time you lift a bloom to your nose. This ethereal fragrance seems to be a feature of the early spring roses. ‘Maigold’, ‘Canary Bird’ and ‘Rosa banksiae lutea’ have this light but pervasive otherworldly perfume. Only the one early flush of bloom but if you are lucky you can get a small autumn show of bloom, she obliged last year after the hot summer. Purplish hips often follow.

‘Frühlingsmorgen’ is the smallest of the Frühlings at a maximum of 2m in height. She like her siblings are tough and hardy. Tolerant of poor soil, low temperatures, and poor growing conditions. Can be plagued with black spot so you need to keep an eye on her. More of a landscape or wild garden rose really than a prime small garden rose. Certainly, well worth growing if you have an informal garden with space as she will delight you with those early blooms and her exotic fragrance.

Wednesday 15th May

When photographing roses in gardens other than my own I am careful that I record the correct name. This care is extended when I download and file the photos. However, it is always possible to make a mistake and I thought today’s rose ‘Œillet Parfait’ was one married to the wrong name. Originally, I looked up this rose sometime in the winter to find she was a striped Gallica not as in the photo a bright pink. Moseying through Graham Stuart Thomas’s (GST) ‘Old Garden Roses’, I found his description of ‘Œillet Parfait’ matches my photograph taken at Mottisfont Abbey last summer. The roses at Mottisfont were all originally collected by GST, and he remarks it is important to remember that the other rose of this name is a striped Gallica so that’s that mystery solved. Care is needed here when purchasing but most nurseries use the name ‘Œillet Parfait Striped’ to differentiate between the two.

Œillet is French for carnation so this rose is a ‘perfect carnation’, referring to the carnation like appearance of the bloom. Introduced in 1841 from the small nursery of Oscar Foulard. A rather understated rose and one that isn’t widely grown, she appreciates good soil and needs a bit of cossetting to give her best.

Small clusters of feathery sepalled round buds quietly open to petite double blooms, just 4-5cm in diameter just like a carnation. The silky petals reflex as the bloom matures giving a pompom appearance, very attractive and unusual. A sweet perfume but a lot for such a little bloom. Only one summer flush of bloom

Neat twiggy growth habit with small soft green foliage and prickly stems. Only around a metre in height so she does not take up too much space. She may well be a good container rose as one can give her good potting compost and move her around to find her favourite garden position.

A reasonably hardy rose, USDA zone 4-9 but I think she would likely have better performance from 5 upwards. Availability seems reasonable but again one must check if the nursery stocks the ‘plain’ or ‘striped.’ David Austin in the UK stocks this plain pink ‘Œillet Parfait’. Whilst skimming the web I found a few French nurseries with this rose but several with the striped type. I was not able to find her in the States or Australia but if you know of a nursery growing her do please comment. Also, if you grow her yourself it would be great to hear about your experience.

I think more of a collector’s rose, but all collections must start with a single item.

Thursday 16th May

I have recently been looking at roses renowned for their hardiness as I have had a question about suitable roses from a page follower in Dufferin County, Canada, zone 4, elevation 500m and windy. I live in a windy area but in Zone 8 and only 30m elevation, so I have a rather different rose growing experience.  In my search for the tough ladies and gentlemen of the rose world, I happened upon this Hybrid Perpetual ‘Archiduchesse Élizabeth d’Autriche’. She is popular in Scandinavia so obviously a hardy soul.

A rose from the productive nursery of Moreau-Robert in Anger, France. The Archiduchesse was introduced in 1881, breeding unknown as was just before hybridising as we know it began to be used widely.

You could be forgiven for thinking she is a David Austin rose as both the bloom form and the fragrance of his roses are very similar to this very beautiful rose. Very fat pink buds, either single or small clusters, open to a large very full petalled bloom. Soft satiny pink wavy edged petals with darker backs, paling as the bloom opens further to reveal a mass of small petaloids in the centre. Strong sweet ‘old rose’ fragrance. Repeat blooms reliably until late autumn. A minus point is her tendency to ‘ball’ in damp weather.

Vigorous in growth and forms a neat shrub of around 1.20m. Very few thorns. Widely available. Hardy USDA zone 4 and warmer. Good strong disease resistance foliage, the leaves are reputed to be particularly tough so this would be a plus on a windy site.

She produced a striped sport early in her career in 1891. This is ‘Vick’s Caprice’, a rose I planted this winter so looking forward to seeing that in bloom. Identical to ‘Archiduchesse Élizabeth d’Autriche’ in every way except the colour. I guess ‘Vick’s Caprice’ is also a tough and hardy lady.

Named for Archiduchesse Élizabeth d’Autriche but which one? Brent Dickerson a renowned rose historian states this is the daughter of Emperor Franz-Joseph of Austria. Franz-Joseph certainly had three daughters Sophie, Gisela, and Marie, but not an Elizabeth. He did have a niece Élizabeth who carried the Archiduchesse title, she was the half sister to Franz-Ferdinand whose assignation precipitated WWI. This niece was only born in 1878 so I wonder if Robert-Moreau would name a rose for a three year old Austrian princess. Élizabeth was a popular name in the Austrian royal family so there are several candidates. Elisabeth Françoise Marie of Habsburg-Lorraine married into the Austrian Royal Family in 1847 becoming another Archiduchesse Élizabeth d’Autriche. Only briefly as she left widowed with a small child within two years. Did this sad story touch the heart of Robert-Moreau? Certainly, this rose naming is a story that needs pursuing.

A worthy rose to add to any garden whoever she is named for. Comments please if you grow her in a cold site.

Friday 17th May

A curiosity of a rose today. There is a condition called ‘proliferation’ which affects some varieties of roses. The bloom opens normally but one or more buds are in the centre. The Bourbon ‘Mme Isaac Pereire’ is bedevilled by this phenomenon, particularly the early spring blooms. The cause is believed to be environmental pressure on the genome causing a mutation in the developing buds. As this appears in the spring it is likely to be weather or temperature related. The following blooms are generally unaffected.

Today’s rose is blighted by proliferation so much so that she is named ‘Prolifera de Redouté’. A French Centifolia rose introduced sometime before 1759, breeder details lost in the mists of time. I photographed her last summer at Mottisfont Abbey gardens and as you can see there is no sign of proliferation at all. Whatever flicks the genetic switches for proliferation was silent last year.

Large feathery sepals enclose typical fat Centifolia buds of pale pink that open to an incredibly beautiful full petalled quartered globular blooms. Pale pink outer petals with slightly darker shell pink centres. Fading to pale pink as the bloom flattens revealing an attractive golden yellow button eye. Strong sumptuous fragrance. Just the single June flush of bloom.

The leaden green foliage provides a good contrast to these attractive blooms. Fair disease resistance. Hardy USDA 4b and warmer. Strong growing and can reach around 1.5m high. Availability? I could find just Peter Beales and a German nursery, http://www.rosenhof-schultheis.de, offering her. Neither mentions the propensity to proliferate although the photo on the German website shows a bloom with those tell tale small buds.

She has a few aliases, the most charming being ‘Childing’ and ‘Childing Provence’. Childing is an old botanical term when a smaller bloom grows out of the centre of a larger bloom, a small child of the parent rose.

Her garden worthiness? I think this depends on your love of the quirky and your available space. A large garden where you can plant her so she isn’t in a prime position, surrounded by other Centifolias would be a perfect position. When she has a ‘proliferation’ attack the other roses will compensate. Does anyone grow her? I would love to hear about your experiences.

Saturday 18th May

Roses do not always have the most stable genomes. Yesterday the Centifolia ‘‘Prolifera de Redouté’ with her desire to produce small ‘children’ from the centres of her magnificent blooms. Today a sport – a genetic mutation causing the rose to produce a stem with different colour blooms – from one of the most prolific ‘sporters’ the famous ‘Peace’ rose we have ‘Chicago Peace’.

When a rose produces a ‘sport’ the stem can be harvested for the budwood and grown on. Occasionally these can revert to the parent. ‘Variegata de Bologna’ a striped Bourbon is a sport of the dark purple ‘Victor Emmanuel’ and often will throw up a branch of this parent. I have a ‘Variegata’ who has done this, so I harvest the ‘Victor’ stem for cuttings. Not only free roses from cuttings but another variety as well, that is my frugal nature!

‘Peace’ has sported around twenty five children, all as good as herself. Well, she may have produced some duds, but they wouldn’t make it into commercial production. ‘Chicago Peace’ was discovered in the late 1950s in the States by Stanley C. Johnson. Stanley was no fool, taking out a plant patent together with the Conard-Pyle nursery for his discovery. He relates in the patent application that in a bed of ‘Peace’ roses in his Illinois garden he noticed a distinct pink bloom with canary yellow petal bases. This sport was propagated by budding and the patent application 2,037 was submitted in March 1961. Conard-Pyle introduced ‘Chicago Peace’ in 1962, named for the principal city of this rose’s home state of Illinois. Said to be one of the best and most popular of the ‘Peace’ sports, I hope the royalties kept the sharp eyed Stanley in comfort for the rest of his life.

Other than the colour ‘Chicago Peace’ is identical to her parent. Large, up to 15cm, full petalled cupped blooms borne singly on the stems. The colour is described on the patent as Phlox Pink and Spirea Red with Canary Yellow petal bases. these are not just any descriptions of colour. The Royal Horticultural Society has a colour chart of 920 colours used worldwide by horticulturists to describe flower colour. It is a pop at £199.99 from the RHS should you need one! Whatever the colour name this is a beautiful mid pink with those yellow bases giving a glow to the bloom centre. The fragrance is not so strong but light and sweet. Repeat blooms reliably all season.

A tall Hybrid Tea around 1.30m to 2m depending on climate and your pruning regime. Dark glossy large leathery leaves typically HT. Reputed to be susceptible to black spot so keep an eye on her. I grow ‘Peace’ who has never had any black spot despite being close to other roses affected. This is the fickle nature of fungal disease!

Widely available. USDA zone 7b and warmer. The American Rose Society only give her a 7.8 – a solid to very good rose, its good features easily outweigh any problems, well above average. This is a rose that is very well above average but that is my humble opinion! I am not such an HT fan but ‘Chicago Peace’ is a very garden worthy rose and will delight all who see her.

Sunday 19th May

Another of the early spring roses today, a Spanish bred rose ‘Nevada’. She does not arrive in a swirl of castanets and flamenco music but just quietly opens her blooms on the odd warm days.  A Hybrid Moyessi dating from 1927 from the foremost Spanish rose breeder Pedro Dot. Nevada’ is probably his most well known rose but the stunning climber ‘Madame Grégoire Staechelin’ is another one of his attractive roses.

Named not for the US state but Nevada is the Spanish word for ‘snowy’ and indeed snowy she is. One of the first spring roses and she often blooms in late autumn as well. Large long buds of white streaked with pink with feathery sepals unfurl into large saucers of the palest creamy white, often with a pink streak. Semi double petals surrounding a crown of golden stamens. These attractive blooms appear along the long arching stems, so she does look like a shrub covered in snow. A light sharp sweet fragrance.

Not a small garden rose as she will easily reach 3m and may top 5m in hot climates. The long arches of stems give her considerable breadth as well. Think of a modern shrub rose crossed with a wild rose and you have a good idea of her shape. A real landscape rose for a large or semi wild garden.

The first spring flush of bloom is the most generous, but she will have just a scattering of continuous blooms all summer. Last autumn following the heat of the summer she obliged with a big flush of bloom. Perhaps she thought she was back in Spain! Her minus point is her slight susceptibility to black spot, you can get away with not spraying but she appreciates some fungicide to give her best.

Widely available. Hardy USDA zone 3b and warmer so another cold hardy rose for those who live in chilly climes. The American Rose Society are big fans as she has an 8.8 score putting her into the class of an outstanding rose, one with major positive features and only minor negatives. The top 1%. 9th in the top rated Shrub list. If you have space this rose is a must on your list.

Tuesday 21 May 2019

 Dunwich is just seven miles from our farm, so we walk there on the heath and beach with the dogs. Situated on the long Sandlings strip running down the coast it has a very different atmosphere, plants and topography from the inner heavy clay farmlands inside of the Sandlings. I bought this rose at the weekend for my husband who is a National Trust volunteer. He was busy this past weekend at the National Trust property Dunwich Heath presenting his history project to visitors. Known primarily as a nature reserve we both used to ask about the history only to be told there wasn’t any! My husband and another volunteer began to research and of course, there was history, tonnes of it, and I was involved as well. Believe me I know more about German WWI submarines and WWII chain low radar stations than it is healthy!

Today’s rose is the hybrid spinosissima ‘Dunwich.’ Reputed to be a ‘found’ rose discovered on the sand dunes of Dunwich beach in 1950 according to most popular sources. Dunwich has a short fairly sharp shelving shingle beach with a section of cliffs between marshes and a river mouth. The North Sea pounds into these cliffs which are eroding fairly fast. The RSPB heap up great shingle banks to protect the Minsmere reserve, and the Environment Agency used to do the same, but lack of funds means each winter the shingle banks to the north are breached allowing the sea to pour into the marshes. It is a harsh inhospitable environment and just a few saltwater loving plants huddle in the shingle. Not a rose amongst them I can assure you. The acid sandy heath above the beach is today a nature reserve but in WWII was a huge busy radar station and the practice site, Operation Kruschen, for the D Day landings. If any plants survived this onslaught, they were not roses either!

The diminishing village of Dunwich has though been a popular summer retreat for a long time full of small attractive cottages with small gardens. I suspect, and so did Peter Beales himself, that this little Dunwich rose is a spinosissima cultivar with a long forgotten name. These Scots roses were very popular in Victorian England with over a thousand cultivars. I found a secondary reference to Viscount Dunwich describing this rose in 1917 which sounded promising. That is until I worked out that in 1917 the then Viscount Dunwich would have been just a fifteen year old boy. Perhaps this rose grew in the gardens of Henham Hall, the long demolished home of the Earls of Stradbroke, Viscount Dunwich being the title for the heir to the Earldom. Maybe with a forgotten name, it was renamed to honour the young viscount by his father or the head gardener? This is a story for which I am sharpening my pencil to find out more!

 This rose produces a lot of bloom, more than most spinosissima. Small pointed creamy buds dot along the length of the low fan like stems and open to jewel like little creamy white single blooms with a perfect bright yellow stamen crown. Lasting just a few days but are quickly being replaced daily by more blooms, and more blooms and then this intense bloom period ends for the summer. In full bloom, she appears to be covered in snow. Large, for this little rose, purply black hips appear in the autumn. The fragrance is fleeting and rather ‘edgy’, not so pleasant. Mind you this is a low growing rose so you will have to get on your hands and knees to get your nose close enough to the blooms!

She makes a neat low dense bush, absolute maximum height of 50cm. The foliage is of small leaflets, 8-10, of dark green borne on prickly stems. These stems fan outwards in an attractive manner. Often used as a ground cover rose as she will happily sucker when grown on her own roots. She is easy to grow from cuttings, so I guess most of the ones offered for sale are own roots. Excellent disease resistance and very hardy, USDA zone 3b-9b. Tolerant of poor soils and drought.

The ‘Dunwich Rose’ is fairly widely available across the world, this surprised me as I thought she would be confined to the UK. A useful rose for the landscape and semi wild garden but she is a small lady she could squeeze into a small cottage garden. Who grows her? Do comment.

NOTE: March 2023 I have now tracked down a little more of the history of this rose. This article will appear soon under ‘The name of the rose’ tab.

Wednesday 22 May

A couple of years ago a local garden centre had an end of season sale where I found a rather scrappy rose at the back of the sale plants. (Hot tip always look at the back of staging, just last week I found a ‘Rosa chinensis sanguinea’ hidden away. Just a single plant, not often seen so this one went straight into the shopping trolley!) Tired of life in a pot, the scrappy rose was a bargain £3.99 so I rescued her. She has taken a bit of time to get going but is now a strong and healthy rose – the Hybrid Rugosa ‘Agnes.’

Yellow is a rare colour in the Rugosa and Hybrid Rugosa groups. ‘Agnes’ has the species Rosa rugosa as her seed parent and the species Rosa foetida ‘Persian Yellow’ providing the pollen. Rosa foetida brings the yellow petal colour but also the susceptibility for blackspot and rust, unfortunately. Luckily, his stinky fragrance reminiscent of cat pee was not included in his gene package for this rose. ‘Agnes’ has an intoxicating fruity fragrance, working in the garden yesterday I had to take a deep breath from her first blooms each time I passed her.

Creamy white buds with rather pinkish sepals appear singly along the stems opening to a rather crumpled full petalled medium size bloom. Creamy lemon tissue thin petals with golden bases give a real glow to the middle of the bloom. Flattening out as she matures and fading to off white. Those tissue petals do mean that she is not a rain lover as the petals just become a soggy mess. Produces just a few blooms at a time but over a long period of a month or more. Hot summers encourage her to show her charms again with a small autumn show. Just a few prickly orange hips.

Foliage is of a Rugosa appearance but a little smaller than usual, shiny wrinkly mid green with toothed edges. Watch her for blackspot and rust in late summer, she had just a sprinkle last summer here with me. Anecdotally it is said that one cannot spray Hybrid Rugosas with fungicide as this is alleged to kill the rose. All I can say is that I have been unable to find any peer reviewed evidence to support this claim. I also grow the Hybrid Rugosa Conrad Ferdinand Meyer who is a complete martyr to rust and a bit of blackspot. I have sprayed him for years and he is a vigorous grower with no sign of death!

‘Agnes’ doesn’t approve of secateurs though, a common trait with Rugosas. Just leave her alone and she will steadily make her 2m height and breadth. This is a very hardy rose, USDA zone 3a-8b, she is a Canadian rose so perhaps that shouldn’t be a surprise.

Bred in 1900 by Dr William Saunders of the Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. He founded the Agriculture Canada Rose breeding program and ‘Agnes’, introduced in 1922 is one of the first of these tough hardy but attractive roses. Named for William’s wife.

A useful early rose who is easy to care for except that slight fungal infection issue and heavy rain. Tolerant of poor soil and drought though. Rather more of a landscape rose as she is of some size and given her dislike of secateurs a small garden won’t be to her liking.

Thursday 23rd May

In my misspent youth, I went to the Norwich School of Art. In our first year, we spent a lot of time ‘fiddling’ around with colour. This seemed such a waste of time, one exercise had me producing 150 precise size squares graduating in an even manner from white -No1 through to black – No150. We painted colour wheels, equally evenly graduated and learnt the colour differences between zinc white and titanium white. Pigments, their history and how they react chemically with each other were another part of the curriculum. Recognition of colours was deemed to be vital. Presented with the names Dutch Pink, English Pink, and Italian Pink I know that these are not, in fact, pink but yellow. Pink being derived from the German word ‘pinkeln’ -to urinate- hence yellow.

If pink can be yellow is the reverse true, yellow being pink? Not in the world of pigments but it seems to be true of today’s rose – the Noisette climber – ‘Desprez à Fleurs Jaune’. She isn’t  Desprez’s Yellow Flower as she is more pink than yellow. I grant though she has some yellow tones along with buff, salmon, cream, off white but overall, she is a pink rose.

‘Desprez à Fleurs Jaune’ was raised by Jean Desprez, (his ‘Baronne Prévost’ featured here 16th February 2019). Parentage is the lovely ‘Blush Noisette’ as the seed parent and the superb ‘Parks’ Yellow Tea Scented China’ providing the pollen. ‘Blush Noisette’ is a pinky, cream rose, and the ‘Parks’ Yellow added the yellow tones to the genetic mix. Introduced in 1830 one of Desprez first roses onto the market.

A large vigorous climber 4 metres or more easily with almost evergreen foliage in warm climates. She blooms continuously all summer into late autumn. Small clusters of buds, around 3-4 of creamy striped pink, unfold into globular cups of mid pink. These flatten to a charmingly untidy quartered bloom stuffed with quills and petaloids in the centre. The bases of these petals have a ‘yellow’ base giving that attractive translucent glow. The blooms continue to flatten and reflex, the petals curling back to allow the bees to harvest the pollen. Highly fragranced and being so tall the perfume travels across the garden.

She has a few minus points, she does not like rain nor cool damp weather. Her blooms spoil and she can be subject to mildew. Grow her on a warm sheltered wall though and she is magnificent.

I was given ‘Desprez à Fleurs Jaune’ as a wedding present and planted her beside the French doors into the garden. She grew vigorously poking her stems into open upstairs windows in the summer. True her dropped petals dried and blew through the open doors across our living room but I did not mind. She had no disease and most winters kept her foliage. Four years ago, she began to fail, a lot of dieback and rather sickly foliage. It looked as though she would have to go. The problem was her large trunk, it would have been a chain saw not loppers to remove it. Instead, I cossetted her, lots of fertiliser and water, plus kind words. After a sulky year, she turned around and is once more climbing up to the eaves. I plan to take cuttings so if she does fail at least I have something of her.

Widely available, you may find her as ‘Jaune Desprez’ particularly in the States. Not a cold climate rose, USDA zone 6b and warmer. If you have a large warm wall, she is a superstar and will not disappoint.

Friday 24th May

Another ‘Frühling’ rose this morning, the sister rose of ‘Frühlingsmorgen’ posted on 14th May, the aptly named Hybrid Spinosissima ‘Frühlingsgold’ – Spring Gold. Indeed, she does spring gold into the Spring days of May.

As with her sister and all the spinosissima roses the blooms are all short stemmed and dotted along arching stems. Long buds of deep orange flashed with orange slowly open to lemon white blooms, initially cupped but before too long they flatten to enormous saucers of pale lemon. The petals have a strong lemon base creating a small ‘sun’ in the bloom centre surrounding the long golden stamens. Often a few streaks of orangey pink on the edges as well. A single rose although she often has up to six petals and a couple of petaloids. I love the way she holds a folded petaloid shyly over her luminous stamen crown. The bees flock to these sunny blooms. Prolific amounts of these ‘saucers’ are produced bending the arching stems practically to the ground over a long period. A light fragrance but it drifts in the warm spring sun perfuming the garden around her. She quietly retires for the summer after this burst of bloom before a small crop of little black hips in the autumn. If you are lucky, she may give a scatter of the odd bloom through the summer.

‘Frühlingsgold’ is a landscape rose really as she can top 2m. She can be pruned after blooming although this will mean no hips, so I leave her alone in the semi wilderness in the rose meadow. Small leaflets, usually nine, of a soft pale green which are rather susceptible to blackspot, unfortunately.

Bred by the German nursery of Kordes and introduced in 1937. I guess that as with any ‘item’ originating from Germany it is likely she would not have been found widely in Britain during WWII and for some time after. She is sometimes sold as ‘Spring Gold’ so that may have been a way around the German name. Lineage is a pale yellow Hybrid Tea ‘Joanna Hill’ with the pollen of Rosa. spinosissima hispida.

Not a small garden rose nor a container one as she needs so much space. I wish these roses could grace the roundabouts and the roadsides to cheer commuters rushing to work. When stuck in traffic they could unroll their car windows and take time to contemplate the blooms and perfume of ‘Frühlingsgold’

Saturday 25th May

Here is the little China rose ‘Sanguinea’ I mentioned on Wednesday found hidden under taller roses on garden centre staging. Unusual to find her as a container rose as normally these rarer China roses are offered as bareroot only.

A lot of China roses were imported into Europe in the eighteenth century losing their Chinese names in the process. Today’s rose has a fair few names, ‘Bengal Beauty’. ‘Bengal Crimson’, ‘Crimson Bengal’ ‘Rosa chinensis sanguinea’, ‘Bengal Cramoisi Double’, ‘Blood-Red China’, ‘Rosa indica cruenta’, Rose de Bangale’ and ‘Miss Lowe’s Rose’ are all names that have been attached to ‘Sanguinea’. There is a belief that these are not all the same rose but closely related Chinas.   ‘Sanguinea’ is considered to be the best of the bunch. ‘

‘Sanguinea’ is reputed to have been found in the south of France by the plant hunter Nancy Lindsay. Nancy has a slightly dubious reputation with her record keeping so this rose may well have been found elsewhere. ‘Rose des Rescht’ was another of Nancy’s foundlings from Persia but it is strongly believed that Rose des Rescht is a nineteenth century French rose. Wherever ‘Sanguinea’ was found she is undoubtedly a rose of Chinese descent.

‘Sanguinea’ has smooth stems with a few prickles, reddish brown when young and rather spindly. Three to five pointed leaves which are also a rich red brown when young and have the typical China ‘loose’ arrangement, one could be forgiven for believing she was suffering from a lack of water. Small crimson buds open to these large single roses with petals that reflex untidily or not at all, giving a rather floppy look to the bloom. Rich strong red which fades to crimson, sometimes with a small central white blotch. Large wispy brown stamens that quickly fold up as in the photo. I looked at her an hour earlier when her stamens were all flat and was just a little slow to return with my camera. A light rather mysterious fragrance, the famous ‘Tea’ like perfume. She blooms quietly, just a few blooms then nothing for a few days and then more buds appear all summer into the winter and often all through the winter depending on the weather.

A warm climate rose as she is not too hardy USDA zone 7b-10b, requiring a sheltered warm sunny place where she can reach 1.20m. Tolerant of poor soil and will happily grow on sandy soil. Available throughout Europe and the Southern States of America but you may have to hunt around for her. I can’t find an Australian stockist, but she would like the heat, so I guess she is stocked by someone in the Antipodes.

Perhaps more of a collector’s rose but she would be happy in a small sheltered garden. A container possibly that can be protected against frost by moving into a greenhouse or conservatory. If you grow her do please comment with your thoughts and experiences.

Sunday 26th May

I apologise for yet another China rose this morning. The Chinas and the Rugosas are amongst the earliest roses to bloom and the latest roses with blooms in December. In warm climates they bloom continuously.

This morning’s rose has been known in cultivation for over a thousand years in China, known as ‘Yue Yue Fen’ translates as ‘Monthly Pink’ a name under which you may find her listed. She is more commonly known as ‘Old Blush’. Believed to be of most ‘Rosa chinensis’ lineage, there are a lot of ‘Chinas’ of a ‘Rosa chinensis’ x ‘Rosa gigantea’, ‘gigante’a being the Wild Tea rose. This explains the rather blurred lines between the two groups with China Tea often used to describe these mixed lineage roses.

Old Blush’ was originally known as ‘Parson’s Pink China’ as it was discovered in the Hertfordshire garden of Mr Parsons in 1793. Collected in China near Canton by Sir George Staunton and introduced by Sir Joseph Banks into the UK. History is silent on why he didn’t name her and how Mr Parsons acquired her. Quickly becoming very popular and as it roots easily from cuttings it was alleged to be in every garden in England by 1823.

One of the four ‘Stud Chinas’ the other three being ‘Slaters Crimson China’, ‘Hume’s Blush Tea Scented China’ and ‘Park’s Yellow Tea Scented China’. Crossed with the once flowering Damasks, Gallicas, Centifolias a new generation of continuous and repeat roses was born.

‘Old Blush’ is one of the best China roses. Not so large in cool climates at around 1.2m but she can reach 3m in a warm sheltered spot or in warmer climates. A graceful delicate appearance as she is compact, shapely with slender stems with the odd prickle and small glossy foliage. No disease, she doesn’t mind poor soil or shade. Hardly needs to be pruned. A very easy rose for novice rose growers or those who want an easy life.

Small pointed crimson buds unfurl into these highly attractive semi double mid pink blooms. Petals with slightly wavy edges, dark pink veins with the odd pale splash. Instead of fading as the bloom matures, she becomes a darker stronger pink. Produces a lot of bloom. The photographs were taken yesterday, and she is coated in pink. An interesting fragrance said to be ‘sweet pea’ like, ‘floral’ is my best description and although light it is pervasive but only when the sun warms her petals.

Hardy USDA zone 6a and warmer. 8.8 score from the American Rose Society putting her into the Outstanding rose category. Rated 12th in their Old Garden Roses category.

A rose that should be in every garden as in the 1820s. She will never disappoint you.

Tuesday 28th May

I have over the years perfected the art of the rapid browse along the hanging rails of charity shops for designer items. There is a quality that stands out from the ordinary. This attribute seems to have transferred to my rose spotting ability. I visited our local plant fair yesterday which was heaving with people even though I arrived just after the gates opened. Lots of stalls or rather patches of ground with plants in rows so tricky to see what was on offer. A large white climber caught my eye from a distance, so I elbowed in and flipped the label over. ‘Mrs Honey Dyson’ ‘Climber, repeat flowering, rare’ I read. I queried the name, but the owner of the stall assured me it was correct. Parting with £10 she was mine.

Checking the International Cultivar Registration Assoc. list I found no listing for Mrs Honey Dyson but she did pop up on both Find That Rose (www.findthatrose.co.uk) and Helpmefind (www.helpmefind.com). Both sites are useful resources for all roses. I discovered that ‘Mrs Honey Dyson,’ no relation to James Dyson of the vacuum cleaner fame, is named for the owner of a Gloucestershire garden where the rose was found in the 1950s.  The rosarian Charles Quest-Ritson believes that this name was given as a ‘temporary’ identification until the real name was found. He believed the correct name was ‘Auguste Gervais’. Well pardon me for disagreeing with so eminent a person but ‘Auguste Gervais’ is too pink and has too many petals to be this rose. Peter Beales mentions in his book ‘Visions of Roses’ that ‘Mrs Honey Dyson’ was a rose he hadn’t seen before, describing her as It is exquisite in both blossom and behaviour. Its flowers are creamy-white and fragrant, loosely cupped in form and produced in drooping clusters’. ‘Auguste Gervais’ is a rose sold by Peter Beales so he would not have made an error in identification.

Peter Beales description exactly fits the rose I bought so I will stick with the name ‘Mrs Honey Dyson’ for the time being. As she is a ‘found’ rose there are no breeder details, date of introduction nor to which group she belongs. Said to reach 3m x 2.5m.

You can see from the photos she is a peachy cream when young, fading to white semi double blooms with a glorious golden stamen crown. Fabulous fragrance as well. Good small leaved glossy foliage. No idea of hardiness or disease status. Two nurseries are offering her for sale in the UK, I do not know if she is available elsewhere in the world though.

I have a place for her to scramble into a hedge beside a garden seat so I will have to see how she progresses.

Does anyone else grow her under the name ‘Mrs Honey Dyson’ or perhaps another name? Please comment

29th May

Surely the glory and purpose of a rose are the blooms in all their shapes, colours and fragrances? Not though today’s rose who is principally grown for her thorns, the species rose ‘Rosa sericea pteracantha’. Lop the ‘Rosa’ off the name and it sounds like a new dinosaur species. Like Pterodactyl, the ‘p’ is silent as the word has a Greek root, so it is ‘teracantha’. This rose even looks rather Jurassic with huge red wing like thorns. Sometimes called the ‘Wing thorn’ rose. The taxonomy discussions over this rose sometimes result in a listing as ‘Rosa sericea ssp. omeiensis f. pteracantha.’ I am unsure as to which is completely correct. Collected in China by the great plant hunter E.H. Wilson in 1900 and introduced into garden cultivation around the same time.

More of a collectors rose, one with a large garden that has semi wild areas. I grow ‘pteracantha’ on a wild bank which does mean I have to walk up the bank to see her thorns though. She should be grown so one gets the sunlight shining through the stems, setting the thorns glowing to a rich ruby red. This spectacular colouring though is only on the young stems. Leave her unpruned for a year and the stems turn to a dreary grey.

The blooms, small single and white dot along the arching stems but to be frank are not a lot to write home about. Their fragrance is fleeting but as an early spring rose the bees and other pollen gatherers are probably her biggest fans. Just the one flush of bloom which is followed in the autumn by decorative round red hips. One has a choice here. One either prunes her back hard after flowering so you get the glowing thorns the spring or you leave her alone and enjoy the lovely hips. I generally compromise by removing some of the oldish stems ensuring some hips and some fiery thorns in the following spring.

Disease free fern like foliage. A tough hardy rose which doesn’t mind poor soil or drought. Can grow to 3m if you don’t prune but much lower around 1.5-2m if you prune after flowering. Not as I have pointed out a rose for everyone, but should you fancy those blood red ‘wings’ and have a landscape garden then consider her.

Thursday 30th May

There are busy people and there are really busy people. I would place the Anglican clergyman Reverend Joseph Pemberton (1852-1926) into the latter category. Although he lived in an age when all in the professional classes or those with wealth had domestic staff, he seems to have been able to achieve so much. Was he an Anglican clergyman who bred roses, or perhaps he was primarily a rose breeder who was a part time clergyman?

Born at the Round House in Havering-atte-Bower, near Romford in Essex in 1852. That middle ‘atte’ is pronounced ‘atty.’ Joseph, together with his sister Florence, lived in the Round House for his entire life. In the large garden, he had a collection of 4000 roses and by 1896 he was raising between five to ten thousand seedlings annually. In his spare time, he was an active member of the National Rose Society. He and Florence showed his roses, rarely missing any rose show. An inspector of schools, he also taught scripture at many schools.

Joseph Pemberton began to breed roses in around 1911, and then more seriously when he retired in 1917. Joseph wished to breed roses that looked ‘old fashioned’ like his grandmother’s roses, with good fragrance and critically the ability to repeat bloom. In this aim he succeeded introducing sixty nine roses during his lifetime, creating the Hybrid Musk group. After his death, Florence continued the breeding programme and following her death the rose business was bequeathed to the Bentall family, long time gardeners for Joseph.

Today’s rose is ‘Francesca’ introduced in 1927. By mid May she is producing large sprays of yellow amber buds streaked with dark pink. Opening to loose semi double apricot yellow blooms with a deep glowing centre. As these flatten the colours fade through peach, cream, buff to parchment white. A light pervasive fragrance drifts around the bush. I grow several ‘Francesca’s’, she is ridiculously easy to grow from cuttings. Two of these are in light dappled shade for some of the day, I notice they are highly coloured and keep their colour longer than the two growing in full sun. Last summer in the high heat rather than a clean petal drop she clutched her dying blooms which frizzled to dirty scrunched tissue balls. I gave the bushes a good shake each morning rather than dead heading as small red hips follow her blooms.

Tough, hardy USDA zone 6b and warmer. No disease at all other than critters that munch. Grows to around 2m high but much wider. Does not mind pruning, a ‘Francesca’ was the subject of the petrol hedge cutter pruning experiment and she is bursting with buds. The American Rose society award her a rather unfair 6.6 – a below average rose which seems a little harsh. If you grow her in the States perhaps you can comment on your experience?

If you want to know more about Joseph and his Hybrid Musk roses visit http://www.pembertonroses.org.uk I am visiting the Pemberton gardens at St Francis Hospice with the Historic Roses Group in July. I will be packing my camera! The gardens are open to the public, but you must book online at the above website.

An easy rose to grow so ideal for those who have a Joseph Pemberton lifestyle!

Friday 31st May

I have a lot of striped shirts and stripey trousers. Several rooms in my house also  have rugs and curtains that are boldly striped. This penchant extends to the garden as I love striped roses and grow a fair number. They are, I can appreciate, a love it or leave it rose so scroll on if you are not a fan.

Today a Floribunda was bred by one of the foremost American rose breeders Tom Carruth. #Tom was the chief hybridiser for Weeks Roses from 1988 until he retired in 2012 with a hundred and forty roses to his name. Today’s rose ‘Hanky Panky’ was introduced in 2000. Both parents were also bred by Tom, the seed parent the striped climber ‘Rosy Outlook’ with pollen from the Floribunda ‘Scentimental’. Unsurprising then to get striped offspring!

One of the most charming aspects of striped roses is that no two blooms are ever the same. Some are an almost solid colour with few stripes, whereas others are a crazy mix of colour and stripes, streaks, flicks of varying thicknesses. ‘Hanky Panky’ is predominantly an orangey red that fades gracefully to dark pink. Semi double with a small glowing centre, cupped when young but flattening out to reveal those good stamens for the bees. Her fragrance is said to be apple like but that one escapes me. Fruity and zesty certainly but I detect no apple. I have a young bush only her second year, but she has a lot of buds and will bloom more or less continuously through the summer.

Healthy glossy foliage, I haven’t seen any sign of disease on her. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b. Maximum predicted height is between 0.80-1.20m so she is suitable for a small garden or a container. I have mine in a large container but come the autumn I will move her into one of the beds. I usually have the container roses in their pots for a maximum of three years before releasing them into the wilds of the garden!

Widely available but take care as there is an orange miniature rose also ‘Hanky Panky’. Today’s rose has the ICRA (International Cultivar Registration Authority) appellation WEKtorcent. This will give you the correct one!

If you like me are fond of the striped roses this is definitely one to think about.

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April 2019

These posts originally appeared on my Facebook blog Rose of the Day.

Tuesday 2nd April

I have a failing ‘Goldfinch’ by my front garden gate. Although he only blooms once he is semi evergreen a useful winter trait. After this summer’s golden bloom, he will undergo ‘shovel pruning’, and the bed will be prepared with a large cardboard box for today’s rose to take his place. This is the Tea Noisette  ‘Crépuscule’ who does have a slight reputation for being tender but the place for her is South facing. There are several in the Peter Beales nursery in Norfolk so they must be hardy enough to cope with the icy winds roaring across the flat countryside.

‘Crépuscule’, the name means twilight, aptly named as she has all the colours of the sunset. Small clusters of three to five shapely peach buds unfold into rather loose apricot yellow blooms. Satiny petals with darker backs with the outer ones often striped red. Fading through the sunset of butterscotch, buff, chamois and cream. She can be variable in her colours, darker in late summer and cool weather but paler in hot weather. Very repeat flowering to the point of being almost continuous. Seems fickle with her fragrance with some reports of little or nothing but others reporting intoxicating fragrance. She has always seemed very fragrant when I have seen her in the past.

Described as either a climber or a shrub requiring support, she produces long stems that arch nicely. Often grown as a ‘weeping standard’ rose which looks glorious in a formal garden. Smooth stems with few if any thorns with glossy slender dark foliage that is coppery crimson when young. Reaches around 3.75m high. Hardy USDA zone 6b-10a and widely available in most countries.

Twilight describes her colours perfectly, but it is an appropriate name in another way. Introduced in 1904, from the French nursery of Francis Dubreuil at the very end of the Tea Noisette period just before the ‘must have’ roses in your garden became the new Wichurana and Multiflora ramblers. This may be why she has always been not such a popular rose, she never got into her stride, often described as a rose deserving of more attention.

Photographed against the walls at Mottisfont Abbey Gardens in the simmering June heat last summer. Can’t wait for that heat to return although at the moment I am doing a small rain dance each morning as we have dry cold east winds here in Suffolk

I am looking forward to seeing this exotic ‘Crépuscule’ at my garden gate. My ‘Goldfinch’ will live on as cuttings from him grow in the blink of an eye, so I have several growing down on the horse fences.

Wednesday 3rd April

It must be exciting to clear an old garden full of scrub and brambles and discover a ‘lost’ rose as you do so. This happened to Vita Sackville-West and her husband Harold Nicolson when they tidied the neglected garden at Sissinghurst Castle in Kent in the late 1940s. Unsure of the correct name it was named ‘Sissinghurst Castle’ although Vita later identified the rose as ‘Rose des Maures’. Her identification is unsure, and many experts don’t support her claim so you will find this little Gallica rose as ‘Sissinghurst Castle’ in all nursery catalogues.

Not a large rose at all, around 1m, with rather upright growth. Small clusters of feathery sepalled buds, usually around three, held up above the foliage. These buds are deep claret and unfold to a rather untidy double bloom. the petals are also claret coloured but with paler edges and much paler lilac magenta backs. A joy to watch as she unfolds her jewel like blooms. There is also an attractive mottled effect on the petals with the occasional white flash. A golden stamen crown which the bloom in this photograph is just shyly hiding with a couple of petaloids. Sweet and light fragrance. Single bloom period in June.

Slender stems with few thorns, long elegant, pointed leaves. She grows easily from cuttings and suckers to a small thicket when she is on her own roots. Doesn’t mind shade, poor soil or neglect but do cosset her to get the best of those blooms. Reasonably disease resistant. She tends to get a touch of late rust with me but not the dreaded black spot. Hardy USDA zone 4b-8b. Seems to be widely available across the world.

She grows still at Sissinghurst Castle in a long bed I believe. One of the most popular National Trust properties so timed tickets on busy days. A dull rainy Wednesday morning is a suitable time to avoid the many crowds.

A charming rose for the smaller garden. I grow her close to a wooded area where she has happily started to wander on her own roots.

Thursday 4th April

A rose today that has yet to endear herself to me as she has been rather an underperformer. ‘Claire Austin’ a David Austin climber introduced in 2007 with undisclosed parentage. I bought her at an end of season container sale in 2015 where she looked like a healthy plant. In three summers, she has reached just a miserly 1.2m and not too much wider. On a sheltered south facing wall in a bed where everything else romps away. She has another chance this summer then I will move her to see if a new neighbourhood prompts her alleged vigorous growth.

Plump creamy lemon buds with pink streaking open to the classic David Austin globular cupped blooms. These are the most delicious vanilla ice cream colouring with the signature strong myrrh fragrance. However, with me, she doesn’t produce the promised abundance of bloom, yet! Tendency to ‘ball’ in damp weather. When she does condescend to give me blooms, they last a maximum of two days before the petals decorate the flower bed at her roots. I can say though, despite the poor growth she shows excellent disease resistance which is a plus. She looks such a spindly miserable thing!

Named for David Austin’s daughter Claire who also has a garden nursery, but one specialises in hardy plants, predominantly irises, peonies and daylilies.

Do I have a dud plant or is she just in the wrong spot? If you grow her, please comment.

Friday 5th March

A rose today that needs to come with a health warning. She is large, enormous really so only suitable to grow through a tree in a large garden, the enigmatically named ‘Paul’s Himalayan Musk’.

Enigmatic as this is a modern rose of unknown breeding but one that doesn’t have Rosa moschata nepelensis, a true Himalayan Musk, in its parentage. The botanists consider ‘Paul’s Himalayan Musk’ to be a R. multiflora or filipes descendant. George Paul introduced three roses in 1916: Paul’s Himalayica, an R. brunonii hybrid, Paul’s Tree Climber, hybrid R. brunonii or R. himalayica, Paul’s Himalayica alba Magna. One of these is likely to be the rose rediscovered in the 1960s and now known as ‘Paul’s Himalayan Musk’.

You can see from the photographs the size of this rose. She grows at the end of my drive as it opens out in the yard in front of the house and was planted around 1984 and grows up, over and through a clump of Ash trees.  Sadly, these trees are beginning to suffer from Ash Dieback caused by the fungus Hymenoscyphus fraxineus so she will lose her support. I guess when the trees are felled ditto the rose and then we will see. If she regenerates, we will have to build some enormous frame but there is a pond behind so not so much space for foundations. I can see that I will need to plant another, she grows well from cuttings. Her maximum predicted height is around 10m so needs careful placing.

Long thin flexible stems hang down producing copious clusters of small elegant pinky white buds that open to these charming blush pink loose semi double blooms. Each one hanging on a tiny thread of a stem. The petals have yellow bases giving each bloom a real glow surrounding the golden stamen corona. Always alive with bees, humming happily as they harvest the pollen and nectar. The pink blooms fade to white and then drop creating a bridal shower underneath. The fragrance is sumptuous. Her height means the fragrance is caught by the lightest of breezes and spreads across our garden into the house. A truly stunning sight for around three weeks before she gently shakes her last blooms away and retires for the year. A crop of small dark hips appears in the autumn but is not so spectacular.

The narrow pointed foliage is semi evergreen even in the teeth of icy easterly gales and thankfully very healthy. Spraying her would be impossible! Hardy USDA zone 4b-9b. Widely available.

I will miss her when the Ash trees have to go, they are slowly dying inch by inch. It’s always an exciting moment when we spot the first blooms on the top of her branches – ‘the Himalayan is off!’ and then it’s summer again.

Saturday 6th April

Possibly one of the most widely grown Moss roses today, the fabulous richly coloured ‘William Lobb’. Just a couple of aliases for this one ‘Duchesse d’Istrie’ and ‘Old Velvet Moss’. Originated from the French nursery of Laffay and introduced in 1855 by Portemer as ‘William Lobb’. Laffay also bred the Moss ‘Gloire de Mousseux’ featured on 31st January.

Named for William Lobb a Cornish plant hunter responsible for collecting seeds of the ‘Monkey Puzzle’ conifer. This tree had been introduced earlier in 1795 but William’s employer James Veitch wanted to exploit what he considered to be a highly commercial tree. Rather too commercial as one sees this very large tree planted in all sorts of unsuitable places such as a small suburban garden! William was a prolific plant hunter and introduced many shrubs and plants as well as the Monkey Puzzle. Too many to list here but the Passion flower and the Wellingtonia pine are two well-known finds

‘William Lobb’ is a rose of astonishing colour. The well mossed soft green with just a tinge of purple buds opens to a dark purple semi double bloom with an untidy but charming muddle of petals in the centre. The petals have a paler pink lilac back giving that nice contrast of colour as he unfurls his bloom to reveal golden stamens surrounded by white petal bases. Just beautiful! Fades quietly through lilac, lavender, mauve, slate grey blue. Heavy fragrance and of course if you brush the moss, you have the balsam perfume as well. A profuse blooming rose so you have all these colours every day for around three weeks and then he goes to sleep for the rest of the summer. Perks up a little in the autumn with round orange bristly little hips.

One of the tallest Moss roses, a lofty 2.5m high with a 1.5m spread so not one for the smaller garden. Vigorous growth habit with long mossy stems with a fair few thorns. He is a sprawler though and needs to be grown by a wall or in a support frame, pillar or trellis. Foliage has serrated edges and is a soft mid green. Rather susceptible to mildew so watch him in the late summer or damp conditions. Hardy USDA zone 4b and warmer. Widely available.

I planted him only three years ago, but he is already a sizeable rose. I pull the long stems down with a weight so one gets the fabulous blooms all along the stems. A rose well worth growing if you have the space. Ideally next to a repeat flowering rose to disguise him once he has completed his summer burst of bloom.

Sunday 7th April

The county of Norfolk is quite rightly proud of its son Admiral Lord Nelson. Born in 1758 a small weak baby not expected to survive he confounded expectations by hanging onto life. What a life, joining the Navy at the age of twelve he rose through the ranks. Given command of the Agamemnon in 1793, proving to have exceptional strategic battle skills he was at the forefront of Naval battles until his death at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. Losing an eye, an arm, but gaining a mistress Emma Hamilton on the way! Driving over the county boundaries on the major roads the signs read ‘Norfolk – Nelson’s County’.

Peter Beales was also a Norfolk man and likewise, his daughter Amanda was born and raised at his rose nursery. Today’s rose is one of Amanda’s shrub rose ‘Horatio Nelson’. Introduced in 1997 with the Delbard Floribunda ‘Centenaire de Lourdes’ as the seed parent and the lovely ‘Aloha’ providing the pollen.

The Delbard genes give ‘Horatio Nelson’ his strong intense fragrance and the glorious colour must come from ‘Aloha’. Plump dark pink buds lighten as they unfold into a large full petalled mid pink bloom. The outer guard petals are of a lighter colour intensifying the darker centre. Described by Peter Beales as an old fashioned style with an attractive rosette petal formation. Reliably repeat blooms into late autumn.

Medium sized at 1.2m x1.2m so useful size for all gardens he is a healthy vigorous rose. Good glossy foliage and hardy USDA zone 4b-9b.

This one is available outside the UK with European, Canadian and New Zealand nurseries listed. Perhaps someone can comment on his availability?

A good rose for your garden particularly if you have an interest in Naval history and if like me you descend from good Norfolk stock.

Tuesday 9th April

One to wake you up this morning! An extremely eye catching rose – ‘Super Trouper’.

Bred by Gareth Fryer who has produced a substantial number of Floribunda roses, around 190. His lovely ‘Let’s Celebrate’ was Rose of the Day on the 21st of December last year. ‘Super Trouper’ was introduced in 2009 by Fryer’s Nurseries. The name? Well, I guess that Gareth Fryer is an Abba fan!

Winner of the Novelty Rose of the Year in 2010 and one can certainly see why. Clusters of fiery sunset orange buds open to an initially blazing bloom, but she softens her colouring as she opens. The combination of pale buffy orange petal backs, the slightly red tinged guard petals and the paler apricot centre make for a striking rose. Repeat flushes of bloom and can be almost continuous in some climates. Fragrance is eclipsed by the colouring I am afraid, just a mild perfume.

A rose on the small side, around 85cm high, would be an ideal container candidate. She will need carefully placing though not to clash with other roses. The second photograph shows her cleverly placed against a quiet background of shrubs. She doesn’t detract from the other plants but still lights up the garden.

Good glossy dark foliage which is healthy. Compact and tidy growing. I cannot find a hardiness score, but I would assume USDA zone 6b-9b. Do comment if you grow her outside of these zones.

I am not too much of an orange rose fan so she wouldn’t be a rose for me. For those of you with those sunset beds who love these hot colours, she is perfect!

Wednesday 10th April

A wild Wednesday rose whose seeds travelled from the Himalayas to Norfolk, nurtured in the garden of a great twentieth century plant hunter and introduced in 1966 as ‘Master Hugh’.

The plant hunter was Maurice Mason, a west Norfolk farmer who farmed just to fund his plant hunting expeditions, and his magnificent gardens. Maurice introduced a vast number of plants, particularly the Sorbus family, was chairman of the RHS tender plants committee and was awarded the Victoria Medal of Honour (VMH).  This is awarded to British horticulturists whom the Royal Horticultural Society Council considers deserving of special honour by the Society.

‘Master Hugh’, named for his son, is the only rose Maurice introduced. A Hybrid Macrophylla from seeds collected in China by a famous trio of Himalayan plant hunters Stainton, Sykes and Williams. This is not a rose for small gardens as he can be a lofty 4.5m and around 2.5m in width. Nor is he a rose for hot and dry areas, his Himalayan ancestry means he is happier in cool even cold damp climates.

In late spring small clusters of buds unfurl into large mid pink single blooms with a magnificent golden stamen corona. A hint of fragrance and nothing more. I have noticed his bloom has reduced as our spring weather is now warmer and dryer. Rather un rose like sparse foliage, looks almost like rowan leaves. Deeply veined matt leaflets, often seven or nine on the leaf stem. Completely disease resistant though. I rarely prune him as he grows up on a bank with masses of space. Hardy USDA zone 4-10 but I fear that 10 would be way too hot and dry for this rose.

Just a single flush of bloom and then in the autumn he rewards one with the most extraordinary hips. Large chestnut brown with a blueish bloom and with long reddish brown fleshy sepals. They remind me of lobsters. If you have friends into flower arranging, they love these unusual hips for their floral creations.

‘Master Hugh’ is not going to suit a small garden or a formal rose garden. He is an interesting landscape rose suitable for wilder areas of a semi natural garden where he can grow tall and wide. If you have such a garden in a cool damp climate do consider him, he won’t disappoint.

Thursday 11th April

A climbing rose not yet in my garden but one that will be planted this winter, replacing a rather straggly and elderly ‘Amy Robsart’. I want an almost continuous blooming climber, poor Amy has just a single flush of bloom. A lot of consideration, shuffling notes, and looking at photographs before I settled on ‘Clair Matin’.

From the premier French rose breeders Meilland, this rose was bred by Marie Louise Meilland and introduced in 1960.

‘Clair Matin’ translates as ‘morning light’ an appropriate name for this dawn pink rose. Vast clusters, up to forty, lipstick pink pointed buds which open out into salmon pink semi double cupped blooms. Fades to a pale sunrise pink as the bloom matures, revealing the bee friendly golden stamens.  Practically continuously in bloom, she starts early in the season and just keeps on going, one of the most freely flowering of all roses. Sweet light fragrance.

She can be grown as a large shrub reaching around 2m. As a climber though she extends those prickly stems up to 4m. A little bit of a diva as she prefers good soil and some care to give her very best. Dark leathery foliage but her disease resistance is also variable, she can suffer both mildew and blackspot. Whenever I write that comment I get lots of remarks from page followers that their rose is very healthy. That. of course, is good to hear but in some areas in some years, this is a rose that will need some fungicide.

Widely available. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b. She has a rating from the American Rose Society of 8.5 placing her in the ‘very good to excellent, one recommended without hesitation’ category. These ratings are based on returns from rose growers in the States.

Friday 12th April

Today we have a rose with what I think is one of the most unappealing names given to a rose the dwarf polyantha ‘Baby Faurax’. Despite this name, she is a very interesting little rose.

Bred by Leonard Lille who had a seed company in Lyon where he sold rose seeds of the ‘Lawrenceana’ (small China roses) and ‘Polyantha’ groups. The parentage of ‘Baby Faurax’ is unknown but one could assume this rose was grown from seeds from Lille’s company. Lille bred around fifteen roses, most now extinct, and introduced ‘Baby Faurax’ in 1924.

Faurax appears to be a relatively common Belgian surname and there was a nursery with this name somewhere in Belgium in the early twentieth century. There are a handful of other roses dating from this time which include this surname, for example, Elisabeth Faurax. I would pronounce the name ‘far row’ as it is French and not Flemish. I doubt it is ‘four rax’ as I have heard. It’s not the baby food Farex either! I guess amongst you all someone knows the correct pronunciation.

However, she will forgive you for mangling her name. She is an accommodating little rose, only around 50cm on her tiptoes, so you can pop her in her container or snuggle her in a small space. Produces fairly large, for her size, clusters of mini bright pink buds. These open to what is reputed to be the ‘bluest’ of all roses. However, she is more a purple to me than a blue, but this colour is highly variable depending on your climate and soil. She can be pinker, violet, lavender even slate blue. The petals with their white base and paler backs create an attractive little, 3cm, double bloom. Reputed to have the fragrance of grapes but I have never got a hint of perfume from her. Blooms in flushes throughout the summer. Healthy and hardy USDA zone 5b-10b. Graded 8.0 with the American Rose Society ‘a solid to very good rose. It is good features easily outweigh any problems. Well above average’.

This is a rose that has been used very successfully in breeding programmes with 102 descendants. ‘Marjorie Fair’ a first generation child who featured on this page on 24th January this year.

If you want that intriguing colour and lack the space for the similar coloured rambler ‘Veilchenblau’ then this pretty little rose is for you.

Saturday 13th April

Today’s rose , the David Austin rose ‘Winchester Cathedral’.

Many of you will be familiar with the pink DA rose ‘Mary Rose’, and she produced a pure white sport, this was named ‘Winchester Cathedral’ and was introduced in 1988. She is a little bit unsure at times whether she should remain white or perhaps flirt again with being pink or even have a bit of both in a bloom. The clusters of globular pink streaked buds open initially to a soft baby pink which quickly fades to a pure white unless she is in a colour dither. Very full petalled with a charming loose rosette arrangement, although I say pure white there is a touch of green in the petal bases. David Austin remarked that this rose is one of the best white roses he bred although one could argue that this rose, being a sport, bred itself. Steadfastly repeat blooms and she has a medium fruity fragrance to complete the picture.

Around 1.2m high with somewhat twiggy growth but she makes a good shape. Good shiny foliage with good disease resistance. Hardy USDA zone 5b-10b. Scoring a 7.9 with the American Rose Society ‘a solid to very good rose. It is good features easily outweigh any problems. Well above average’.

Named for the Winchester Cathedral Trust, a registered charity that helps the cathedral with renovation and development projects. This cathedral in common with other British cathedrals has a daily running cost in the region of £10,000. Initially, a percentage of the sales went to this Trust, but she is now out of the protected breeders’ rights time frame, so I guess this no longer happens. Being out of protected breeders’ rights does mean that you will find ‘Winchester Cathedral’ propagated and sold by other nurseries although David Austin still has her in the current catalogue.

Certainly, a much better rose than last Thursday’s ‘Claire Austin’. If you want a repeat flowering white rose, then ‘Winchester Cathedral’ fits the bill.

Sunday 14th April

A rose of several names again! A Hybrid Tea from the German nursery Kordes – ‘Beverly’. Known in Britain as ‘Pink Perfection’, ‘Perfume Passion’ in Australia and South Africa and France has her as ‘Sophie Davant’. Her exhibition name is ‘Beverly’ and the ICRA appellation is KORpauvio so that last one will get you the correct rose.

Introduced in 2008 as part of Kordes Eleganza collection she has a stash of awards including a 2012 Gold Medal, Best Rose in Trials, Best Fragrance and Best Hybrid Tea in Australia. They clearly love her down there! However, in the States, she only achieves a 7.8 in the American Rose Society grower’s evaluation – ‘a solid to very good rose. It is good features easily outweigh any problems. Well above average’

A strong growing rose that produces typical HT elegant buds of a greenish white streaked pink.  Opens white and touched with pink but the pink deepens as the bloom matures finishing with a deeper pink centre with paler guard petals. Very full petalled, she looks more like a classic old fashioned rose rather than an HT. Repeat blooms throughout the summer. Some reports that she is a fair weather rose tending to ‘ball’ in damp weather.

Strong zesty fragrance. I couldn’t resist adding her fragrance description from the Kordes website. One doesn’t think of the Germans as being quite so poetic – ‘The scent is intense, yet fresh. The top notes of citrus are present even when the bud is just opening. When the flower is fully open the wonderful heart notes of fresh litchi and white peach predominate with the fragrances of pear and plum also being present. The earthy base notes of patchouli and fresh myrtle are faint but complete the experience.’ Mmm OK!

Rather variable in height depending on your climate. In the UK she will be around 1m but easily 2m in warmer countries. Tall growing habit with good semi glossy foliage. Reputed to be very disease resistant. Hardy USDA zone 5b-10b.

I don’t have this rose in my garden but if you grow her perhaps you could comment on the damp weather problem with the blooms? Otherwise, she looks like a very worthy rose.

Tuesday 16th April

One of the most popular and prettiest of the Noisette roses this morning ‘Céline Forestier’. A lady who likes a sunny spot to give her best, but she is a tough hardy soul.

Bred by Victor Trouillard who gave us the rather special Cardinal de Richelieu, and bred in 1842 so she is one of the early Noisettes. She was not introduced onto the open market immediately, having to wait until 1860 when a fellow nurseryman André Leroy unveiled this charming rose.  Parentage is not known but some guesses at ‘Champneys Pink Climber ‘and ‘Parks Yellow. Named for a close friend of Victor Trouillard and of that, I can find no more information. This is a magnificent rose, so I hope that his friend was as delightful

A rose that surprises one by producing small clusters of dark pink buds in early summer that change their colour to pale yellow as they unfurl. Exquisite full silky petalled blooms with centres of darker yellow, buff and apricot. Charming untidy petal arrangement, full of small quills in the centre surrounding a tiny green button eye. As she matures and flattens out the guard petals fade to creamy white, a truly elegant fragile beauty. Strong intense ‘tea’ fragrance. Once she starts to bloom, she will continue without a break until the first frosts.

When grown as a shrub she will reach 2m but much higher if you grow her as a climber particularly if you have a warm wall. Semi glossy almost evergreen healthy foliage, small note that she can suffer late season mildew. Hardy USDA zone 7b-11b, so not a cold climate rose at all. Holds an RHS AGM medal (Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit). Graded 8.4 with the American Rose Society (A good to excellent rose. One recommended without hesitation). She does have a slight reputation for being difficult to grow but this is related to being a slow starter, so patience is needed in her early years with you.

‘Céline Forestier’ is a rose that needs careful placing and then a little bit of cosseting. I would love to grow her, but I have run out of warm walls. That is unless I hire some roadworkers with their equipment to punch a hole through concrete beside a south facing wall in the farm yard. Now that is an idea!

Wednesday 17th April

A wild Wednesday rose, well she is a found seedling of ‘Rosa nutkana’, known as ‘Rosa nutkana ‘Plena’. Her delicate blooms belie her toughness, hardiness, disease resistance and tolerance of poor soil and shade.

‘Rosa nutkana’ is a native of California, Oregon, Washington, British Columbia, and Alaska. Discovered by Archibald Menzies, one of the scientists with Vancouver’s expedition in 1793. Named for Nootka Sound on the west coast of Vancouver Island. I guess that ‘Plena’ appeared from a chance cross when Rosa nutkana was grown as a garden rose.

I don’t know how many people grow this rose, I have never seen her growing anywhere other than in the species rose collection at Peter Beales nursery. I bought her from Peter Beales back in the 1980s and planted her in a rubbish bit of soil in the front yard of the farm. The trees on the edge have now grown quite tall so she is in shade for part of the day.

Her pink buds appear late June to early July opening to a delicate semi double lilac pink bloom with a big yellow stamen crown. Strong fragrance from such a quiet little bloom. Matt green foliage with deeply ridged leaves. Red hips follow in the autumn and hang onto the bush until the spring. They must taste unpleasant as the birds never touch them.

Grows to around 2m high and around the same width. Available in Europe but I cannot seem to find her in the US at all. Perhaps if you grow her there you can comment on this? Her parent ‘Rosa nutkana’ is hardy USDA zone 3b and warmer so ‘Plena’ may well be similar.

She isn’t a choice front of the border rose but if you have an awkward corner in a large garden, she would fill this very well. She fits my semi wild wilderness area well and surprises visitors who catch her astonishing fragrance drifting in the summer air.

Thursday 18th April

Living in the rather flat Suffolk countryside I yearn for a garden on the side of a hill so I could have terraces and banks. One always wishes for the impossible! Today’s rose is one to grow falling down a bank or over the side of a terrace. However, the photo was taken at Mottisfont Abbey where ‘Raubritter’ was spreading her charms beside a small ornamental pond.

‘Raubritter’ is a procumbent rose, wider than she is tall if you grow her as a shrub. Give her support and she will scramble up to 3m. This idiosyncratic growth habit occurs with most of the procumbent roses. Bred in Germany in 1936 by Wilhelm Kordes, the pink hybrid Macrantha ‘Daisy Hill’ provided the seed with the red hybrid Wichurana ‘Solarium’ donating the pollen.

Small pointed dark pink buds appear in large clusters in early June opening to the most astonishing bloom. The profusion of buds open to silvery pink globes each with a small opening at the top, very un rose like. The small opening gradually becomes wider and wider until a beautiful dark pink peony like bloom emerges. Just so beautiful, one could look at them all day. Fragile and delicate petals which don’t like the rain or dampness sadly as they will ‘ball’. A fresh sweet fragrance drifts from these superb blooms. Just one magnificent flush of bloom but you do get a lot of bloom for a long period

A tendency for black spot and mildew so not a rose for the non spray garden. Otherwise, she is very vigorous with slender prickly stems and narrow wrinkled foliage. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b. Reputed to be very frost resistant. American Rose Society grading 8.1 (A solid to very good rose. Its good features easily outweigh any problems. Well above average).

This dainty rose has to me an entirely inappropriate name. A Raubritter was a feudal robber baron or knight imposing unfair taxes and demands on his subjects. I can think of several rampaging thorn ridden ramblers for whom the name Raubritter would be extremely apt but not this pretty rose.

Although she may have been overtaken by the modern healthy continuous flowering ground cover roses I still think ‘Raubritter’ is well worth growing If you have the space for her to sprawl or scramble, she will undoubtedly bring admiring glances from your friends and visitors.

Friday 19th April

I learnt the art of total immersion in a book at a very young age. This was a huge advantage growing up in a noisy and somewhat chaotic household. I opened my book and stepped into another world obvious to anything addressed to me. Eager to get to the end of any story I learnt to read very fast as well so I have read a lot of books. I don’t recall reading any of the Swiss novelist Albert Cohen’s books. Today’s rose the Delbard Hybrid Tea takes her name ‘Belle de Seigneur’ from one of his romantic novels. A satire of international relations in the 1930 and the seduction of a married French aristocrat. A film also but have not seen that either!

Delbard clearly had the seduction idea in mind when naming this rose. She may well seduce you if you add her to your garden with her colour and the signature Delbard fragrance.  Characteristic HT buds of dark pink appear in small clusters held aloft of the red tinged dark green foliage. This foliage is the perfect foil for the large very full petalled blooms opening from those elegant buds. Delicious apricoty pink petals with darker petal edges that have peach bases giving a deep glowing centre. She is a rose influenced by growing temperature though. Grow her in cooler climes and she will be a calmer but still striking delicate pink touched with apricot and copper. Classical HT high pointed centre but they flatten out with age. I prefer HTs a little past their prime blowsy and carefree rather than the perfect tight points of early life. Long lasting blooms both on the bush and in a vase for the house. Luxurious perfume, heavy with fruit notes.

On the small side only 60-80cm high but is likely to be higher in hot climates. Good disease resistance. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b but it looks as though she is happy 9b-10b. Widely available but you may well find her listed in South Africa as ‘The Midlands Rose’. An ordinary name for this spectacular rose! I prefer ‘Belle de Seigneur’

A real ‘Sunset’ coloured rose so you will need some thought on placing ‘Belle de Seigneur’ to avoid a sunglasses moment should you grow her next to a bright pink. I see she is recommended for informal hedging and given her small stature she would be ideal in a container.

Now that book Belle de Seigneur. Amazon calls!

Saturday 20th April

‘Horatio Nelson’ was our rose of the day on the 7th of April, so it seems appropriate to feature his mistress ‘Lady Emma Hamilton’. ‘Horatio Nelson’ bred in his birth county of Norfolk by Peter Beales whereas ‘Lady Emma Hamilton’ is a David Austin rose. Introduced in 2005 to celebrate the two hundredth anniversary of the Battle of Trafalgar. I wonder why ‘Lady Emma Hamilton’ and not ‘Trafalgar’? There is an old Hybrid Tea ‘Trafalgar’ no longer available but perhaps ‘Lady Emma Hamilton’ has a more romantic feel.

Like her namesake, this is a beautiful rose, but she can be a hot colour so needs care in placing, also like her namesake! Buds of orange streaked red open to a characteristic DA globular bloom. Initially, these blooms are a hot tangerine orange with paler guard petals and a sunglow yellow centre but fear not as the colour soon calms as the bloom ages to a loose petalled bloom. The outer guard petals fade to a lovely pale pink apricot with a beautiful peach gold centre. She does vary considerably according to growing conditions, with intense colour in the heat and dry whereas she is more mellow in the cool and damp. Strong perfume described in the David Austin catalogue as fruity with hints of pear, grape and citrus fruits. I will leave it to you to decide on this fruit cornucopia! Repeat blooms all summer.

Not over large, just 90cm high but as usual with roses, she will be taller in a warm climate. Very dark bronzed green foliage which really makes those blooms ‘pop’. Bushy growth habit. Good disease resistance. Hardy USDA zone 5b-9b. American Rose Society grading 8.0 (A solid to very good rose. Its good features easily outweigh any problems. Well above average).

Growing up in Norfolk and going to a school where I was in the Nelson House, I don’t recall hearing too much about Lady Emma. Probably considered inappropriate back then for young ears. She led an exciting if risqué life. Born into a poor family and christened Amy she made her way to London as a teenager to work in domestic service. Her beauty ‘saved’ her from a life of dreary cleaning though. Mistress to two aristocrats and bearing the child of one. The society artist George Romney became obsessed with Emma as she was now known, and she features in many of his historical paintings. The second image shows his painting of Emma as ‘Circe’.  Emma was ungraciously palmed off by one of her lovers onto Sir William Hamilton the British envoy in Naples. Although thirty four years her senior he married her in 1791, and later that year she met Nelson. Her married life was as flamboyant as her youth. She entertained guests at diplomatic parties scantily dressed in classical tableaus. Her great love though was for Nelson and this liaison seems to have been condoned by Sir William as they lived in a ‘ménage à trois’. A daughter Horatia was born before Nelson was killed at the Battle of Trafalgar. Emma slid into a life of debt and alcohol and died in Paris at the age of just fifty.

George Romney – Lady Hamilton as Circe

I have the white semi double Peter Beales rose ‘Nelson’s Pride’ but he is snuggled up with the early single HTs ‘Ellen Willmott’ and ‘Mrs Oakley Fisher’. I wonder if those two straight laced ladies would welcome the flamboyant ‘Lady Emma Hamilton’ joining them?

Sunday 21st April

Easter Day so I send you best wishes. Today is also Her Majesty Queen Elisabeth’s birthday and today’s rose is the Grandiflora ‘Queen Elisabeth’.  The 21st of April is her actual birthday, with the official one being on the second Saturday in June.

An iconic rose bred not in Great Britain but in sunny California by Dr Walter Lammerts who produced several Hybrid Tea and Grandiflora roses. The Grandiflora class was initiated by this rose ‘Queen Elizabeth’. The qualities of a Grandiflora are said to be a combination of Hybrid Teas and Floribundas and of course large blooms. The name is a bit of a clue there. The term is more widely used, I think, in the States than in Britain.

Introduced in 1954 to honour the 1952 coronation of Queen Elizabeth. I can’t see that two year gap occurring now in the days of sharp marketing! This is a very widely grown rose or should I say was. Still in catalogues but one doesn’t often see her in garden centres. I often get sent photos of an unknown pink rose found in Granny’s garden or on an old property. Usually, the unknown is this glorious pink ‘Queen Elizabeth’. She grew here at the farm when I first arrived but in a really poor position. I moved her but she fell into a decline and died. My mother, an ardent Royalist, blamed this death on me as I am not a great supporter of the Royal Family!

Large clusters of tight elegant lipstick pink buds but you can also get a single bud, on long dark stems. She is a good rose to cut for the house. Neat furled high pointed pink blooms to begin with but they open further and flatten to an attractive bloom. The outer petals are a pale seashell pink with an appealing ruffled edge surrounding the smaller mid pink centre petals. The petals reflex and ruffle as she flattens to reveal the golden stamens. Not a heavy fragrance but sweet and light. Gracious perhaps? Flushes of these gorgeous blooms all season.

Slightly inclined to late rust attacks so watch her carefully. She is narrow in growth habit but can be very tall 2.5m easily. Often grown against a wall as a climber. Vigorous and tolerant of poor soil.  There is a climbing sport ‘Climbing Queen Elizabeth’, but it suffers from too much vigour so the high blooms wave to the sky and the stems are almost too stiff to bend and train. There are also two other sports, white and yellow.

‘Queen Elizabeth’ has been awarded a slew of awards since her introduction including Rose of the Year in 1979. If you have the space for her, she is a rose worth considering.

Happy Easter.

Tuesday 23rd April

One of the oldest rose growing, and breeding companies in Britain, established in 1765, is just an hour’s drive from me, I have frequently passed within a few hundred metres of their gates, but I have never visited Cants of Colchester. This is a shocking admission and I aim to correct this by visiting this summer. Cants no longer breed roses just concentrating on the sale of roses. The nursery remains in the Cant family although the current owners the Pawseys are descendants from the female line. Roger Pawsey bred the popular and beautiful ‘Just Joey’ featured on 21st March.

Originally the company was known as Benjamin R. Cant & Sons. In the child naming tradition of the Victorian era, the eldest son was usually given their father’s Christian names. We are concerned here with Benjamin R. Cant (1827-1900), (the R for Revett, his mother’s maiden name), who bred a fabulous Tea rose naming it for his wife -‘Mrs B.R. Cant’ – today’s rose of the day.

Introduced in 1901 this Tea rose has remained very popular particularly in the States and Australia as she is a bit of a hot weather lady. The picture perfect pink touched buds are carried above the bush on long stems, excellent for a cut flower. Opens to a very full petalled silver pink bloom with a quartered centre. Darker pink petal backs giving an attractive contrast as the bloom flattens and the petals reflex. Just such a faultless classic rose form you absolutely can’t beat it. Fabulous Tea fragrance and she starts blooming early in the season and just keeps on going until the frosts of winter. Her autumn blooms are often better than the early summer ones.

She needs some space should you plan to grow her as she grows as wide as she is tall. Can be 2.5m high and frequently more in hot climates. Does not appreciate being pruned too hard, leave her to her own devices. Dark healthy foliage and a bushy habit. Tolerant of poor soils. Hardy USDA zones 7b-9b. Being a Tea rose she will not appreciate cold winds so find her a sheltered spot. The American Rose Society grading is a whopper of 8.9 (An outstanding rose. One with major positives and only minor negatives. The top 1%). Praise indeed.

Whilst researching her I found a digital copy of Cant’s 1916 catalogue where I found ‘Mrs B R Cant’ at the cost of 1 shilling, 5p in decimal currency. Historic price equivalents are slightly tricky, but the real price is £3.33 in today’s money. The labour value £15.21 with an income value of £20.40. Fairly comparable with the cost of roses today in Britain.

Widely available but not however from Cants of Colchester, nor any other UK nursery. They do not stock any Tea Roses. One would think they would stock roses of their own breeding!

Wednesday 24th April

The first of the 2019 roses from my garden this morning. Usually, the harbinger of spring here although I have to say she is a little late to display her charms this year. This extraordinary spring has meant the wearing of shorts and sunburn before her sunny blooms opened. “Look the Canary Bird is out so it must be spring at last!” was not this year’s spring proclamation.

Rosa xanthina ‘Canary Bird’ is a rose of British origin, introduced in 1907 but who bred her or what her ancestry is remains mysterious. Rosa xanthina, a species rose from China, is very similar but has double blooms and prickles. ‘Canary Bird’ is generally considered to be a hybrid of either Rosa xanthina or Rosa hugonis. Graham Stuart Thomas reports she was reputedly raised at Osterley Park in west London, but I can’t find any other reference to this birthplace.

A large rose who grows wider than she is tall. Her foliage is bright green but small delicate and fern like, around 9-11 small leaflets. These are carried on long arching reddish brown stems. Along these stems appear small tufts of leaves each bearing a jewel like yellow bud which pop open to small single bright golden yellow blooms. A magical sight. Each little bloom has a golden corona of stamens, a feast for hungry pollinators. The bright yellow fades in the sun to cream before the petals drop. A light ethereal fragrance not like any other rose. In reality Canary Bird is all together an un rose like rose!

Just the one single glorious flush of bloom although after a hot summer she will produce a scatter of blooms in the autumn. Small black hips appear but these are not as glorious as her spring blooms.

Absolutely no disease problems but she does suffer from dieback. I have two bushes and one has had so much dieback that she may have to pass on to the great compost heap in the sky. Leave your secateurs in the drawer for this rose, she dislikes pruning and this can accelerate die back. She isn’t a fan of cold icy winds, USDA zones 5b and warmer. The American Rose Society grades her as 6.5, a below average rose. I feel this is a little harsh, she is a rose that I would always have in my garden. She needs space though so more suited to a landscape or wild garden than a formal town garden. Reaches around 2.5m in height and approximately 3.5m wide.

Her flush of bloom lasts around two weeks before she retires for the summer but then the other roses are waking up and summer is practically here.

Thursday 25th April

If you have the chance to visit Mottisfont Abbey Gardens in Hampshire UK, leap at it! A stupendous rose garden holding the National Collection of Pre 1900 roses in two well designed walled gardens. Those of you who have been lucky enough to visit will remember I am sure the central pathways with the attractive arches covered in climbers, the semperviren rose ‘Adélaïde D’Orléans’.

Semperviren roses were brought into being by the head gardener Antoine Jacques to the Duc D’Orléans, at the Chateau de Neuilly. Jacques used the species rose Rosa sempervirens, a strong healthy rose, in his breeding programme. To call this a breeding programme is a little ambitious. At the time it was more of a hit and miss affair compared to the highly controlled and organised programmes used today. However, from his amateur work some fine climbing roses were produced, ‘Félicité et Perpétué’ being his most widely grown rose.

‘Adélaïde D’Orléans’ produces large clusters of small bright pink buds which hang downwards in a small waterfall rather than being held erect. These little pink buds unfurl to a blush pink bloom opening further to a creamy white semi double rose with charming heart shaped petals. A small golden stamen crown in the centre pulls all the bees and pollinators towards her. Sweet light fragrance said to be reminiscent of primroses, I will leave that one for you to decide! The outer guard petals retain their pinkiness giving a slight colour contrast to the attractive cascades of bloom, a truly breath taking sight. Enjoy it while it lasts as Adélaïde blooms just the once in June.

A rose requiring space or very tall arches as she can reach a lofty 5m. The Mottisfont arches are not 5m so there will be a severe prune following her June flush. Good disease resistant small dark foliage but some report she can be hit by mildew so keep an eye for this quickly defoliating condition. Hardy USDA 6b-9b.

Adélaïde D’Orléans’, actually Louise Marie Adélaïde Eugénie was a member of the Bourbon family born in 1777 daughter of the Duc D’Orléans. She was a twin but her sister Léopoldine died aged four. Antoine Jacques named another rose for Leopoldina and it seems over time these two roses have become muddled and one has been lost to cultivation. Adélaïde may well be ‘Léopoldine D’Orléans’! Adélaïde led an interesting life in chaotic revolutionary France and the Bourbon restoration. Unmarried she lived with her brother, King Louis Phillipe and his wife running their household and caring her their children. In her youth she took painting lessons from the great rose artist Pierre-Joseph Redouté producing excellent floral portraits.

Louise Marie Adelaide Eugenie d’Orleans

If you have space for a large rose arbour or arch Adélaïde D’Orléans’ is certainly one to consider.

Friday 26th April

When I plan these posts, I usually try not to have two similar roses back to back, but I have failed on this as we had a climbing rose yesterday and we have another today! Today’s rose is rather more modern though, the David Austin ‘The Wedgwood Rose’.

Introduced in 2009 and named to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the founding of the Wedgwood fine china and porcelain company.

Not an overly tall climber, with a maximum, predicted height of 3m. The DA website relates that she will quickly grow into a superb climber as she sends up many shoots from the base. Seems a slightly weird claim as a climber needs a good fan shape with a few, five or seven, strong stems at the base and then you can let some side branches grow from the main stems. That however is my understanding of a good climber. A few reports that the stems are weak, but one must take these reports sometimes with a small pinch of salt. One doesn’t know the growing conditions nor the expertise of the grower.

The buds are a greenish white with a rather ruffled appearance. They open to large full petalled soft pink blooms, the petals have a charming central pointed edge. The outer guard petals are pale pink, and the DA website says these petals are a delicate gossamer. These tissue thin petals, lacking starch in their structure, mean sadly one major disadvantage, the blooms ‘ball’ badly in damp conditions. Think of those thick fleshy Hybrid Tea petals, they never ball or spoil in the rain! The fragrance is that of fruit. Repeat blooms very well through the summer.

I see from various photographs on the web that the blooms have a tendency towards a weak neck causing the blooms to hang down. Never a great feature in a rose but at least in a climber you can look up at these downward facing blooms.

Dark glossy foliage and good disease resistance reported. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b.I find a lot of the more recent DA roses seem to either be superb or a disaster although they seem to always perform well in the hotter dryer parts of the world.

If you grow this rose do please comment as it is always of interest to hear others’ experiences.

Saturday 27th April

On an old village map dated 1590, our farm is marked as ‘newly built 1550’. A section of the 1550 house survives but has a later brick wall at the far end. We suspect from the remaining fractured beams that this end of the house collapsed over time and was demolished. From the humps, bumps and hollows in the garden the original footprint of the house can be guessed at. A lot of roses now cover this area but there seems to be a particularly long hollow where roses can be slow to establish. Today’s rose had the misfortune to be planted in this hollow, so she has been slow to get into her stride. A Peter Beales rose – ‘The Perse Rose’.

Rather a tall narrow rose with a predicted height of 1.5m but only a slender 1m wide. Better probably as a pillar rose than a shrub. Of course, in a small garden, these roses with a tall narrow growth habit do mean you can pack more roses into a confined space. Large clusters of fat dark buds arrive all summer, unfurling into large full petalled mid pink blooms. Attractive wavy edged petals that reflex nicely to reveal a darker quartered centre. She has a classic old fashioned feel to her coupled with a sweet light pervasive fragrance.  Healthy glossy foliage which appears to have good disease resistance.

I have struggled somewhat to find the extent of nurseries that stock this charming rose. Certainly, she will be available from Peter Beales and some other UK nurseries. I see that a Moscow based grower has posted photos on the helpmefind website so she has reached Russia! I guess also to be found in some of the major European nurseries as well. I doubt whether she is available further afield, unfortunately.

Introduced in 2015 to mark the 400th anniversary of the founding of the Cambridge school The Perse School. Stephen Perse an academic, physician and philanthropist left a legacy to set up a school to change lives through education. The school, open to children from all backgrounds, is Cambridge’s oldest surviving secondary school.

I wasn’t aware of the 400th birthday commemoration connection when I planted my rose in the 1600 bumpy area of the garden, but this now seems appropriate. This spring she looks very chipper but then she didn’t have to suffer the ten days of last March’s ‘Beast from the East’. Perhaps she was just sheltering in her little hollow last summer afraid to lift her head too high.

Does anyone else grow her? Do please comment.

Sunday 28th April

A serene rose today that I grew a fair number of years ago and whilst doing the research I was left wondering why I have not replanted her. A Hybrid Musk introduced in 1939 from the German nursery of Kordes – ‘Erfurt’.

Kordes used his lovely crimson Hybrid Musk ‘Eva’ as a seed parent with the dark pink Hybrid Tea climber ‘Réveil Dijonnais’ providing the pollen. From this liaison, he created one of the most popular modern shrub roses. Named for the central German city of Erfurt which has one of Europe’s best preserved medieval city centres.

The elegant Hybrid Tea like buds are bright pink and are carried in large clusters on the long red tinged arching stems. Unfurling to a simple uncomplicated pink bloom of 4 to 10 petals that have pale creamy lemony bases encircling the long golden stamens. She can be quite a bright pink when grown in high temperatures but more usually this very understated pink as seen in the photograph. From this unsophisticated bloom, an exquisite perfume arrives. The first blooms cleanly drop and a crop of round green hips quickly appear, turning to a reddish orange. She blooms continuously so you get the unusual combination of both blooms and hips all summer. Very eye catching!

Extremely disease resistant foliage that is bronzy red when young maturing to ridged puckered leaves. Tends to be wider than she is tall, generally around 1.50m high and 2m wide. As with most roses she is likely to be taller in hotter climes. Tolerant of poor soil. Hardy USDA zones 4b-10b. An 8.4 score from the American Rose Society, that’s ‘a very good to excellent rose. One recommended without hesitation.’ Widely available. A rose for the no spray garden and for those who want an easy but attractive rose.

An excellent rose and she is in my notebook for the 2019/20 planting season. I am sure I can squeeze her in somewhere! Who grows her?

Tuesday 30th April.

This extraordinary spring brings the roses to bloom earlier than expected. Although yet to be in her full glory today, still April, we have the modern shrub rose ‘Maigold’.

Always an early rose to bloom, a legacy from her pollen parent ‘Fruhlingstag’ literally Spring Day also an early rose. Likewise, ‘Fruhlingsgold’, Spring Gold, the pollen grandparent to ‘Maigold’. These two Hybrid Spinosissima Fruhlings were bred by Reimer Kordes, a prolific breeder of fine roses. ‘Maigold’ is another Kordes rose, introduced in 1953, her seed parent the Danish Floribunda Poulsen’s Pink. What a meeting of excellent Northern European roses.

I grow ‘Maigold’ against a south wall as a climber, but she is also happy as a shrub. Her very thorny, needle prickly stems are none too flexible and can easily snap so you will have to gently coax them into the appropriate position. I loop Flexi Tie around the stem and gradually pull it into place as the stem grows over several weeks.

Masses of dark pink buds with long feathery sepals appear in early spring. As they crack open the colour changes to a flame streaked pink orange. Beautiful coppery apricot orange blooms unfurl to greet the spring days. Opening to a large, 10cm, semi double bloom paling to creamy peach buff, the petal bases are a growing lemon encircling the crimson stamens. A delight for those hungry early foraging bees. Eventually fading further to a yellowish white. Her best show is in the spring, but she produces blooms intermittently all summer. In last year’s astonishing heat, she produced excellent flushes of bloom all summer. Fragrance is strong and fruity, but I detect a very slight edginess common in yellow roses. I have read she smells of linseed oil but not to me, I wonder if this is that sharp edge to the perfume described differently?

The foliage is glossy pale green with serrated edging to the leaves and very good disease resistance. Another rose that dislikes to be pruned. Just lightly after her first flush as she will bloom next summer on this year’s summer growth, what is known as old wood. To clarify this Hybrid Teas for example, bloom on new wood, the current year’s growth. She can reach 3m in height and breadth, given the dislike of pruning she is a rose that deserves a reasonable amount of space. Hardy USDA zone 4b-9b. The American Rose Society rating is a lowly 7.6 – ‘A good rose, a little to somewhat above average’. Widely available.

I always look forward to her spring display after the dark and cold of the winter. A rose certainly that I would always have in my garden. Do comment if you grow her.

March 2019

The following posts originally appeared on my Facebook blog ‘Rose of the Day’. Facebook doesn’t keep the older posts available, hence recreating them on this blog for you to enjoy.

Friday 1st March

Today a rose that also I am very fond of. A Gallica rose, one with a lot of discussion on its true identity, the correct name and the namesake, – ‘Charles de Mills’. It likely dates from the late 1700s.

Several namesake choices for this rose. Could be a director of the East India Company, a Nottinghamshire nurseryman, a Mr Mills living in Rome in 1840 who had a pergola covered in roses. Perhaps this is a German rose Charles Wills whose name morphed to de Mills when the rose arrived in France. Also, a German rose named ‘Bizarre Triomphant’. Are they one and the same? Bizarre is a French corruption of Bizard, a German term for the streaks found in tulips. Given that ‘Charles de Mills’ doesn’t have streaks this identity seems tenuous. Another claim is this rose is one of fifteen Dutch bred Gallicas. Possible but the name Charles de Mills has more of a French ring about it.

Whoever Charles was, where he lived or his career choice, this is a superb rose, one of the best Gallicas I think. The cerise buds are round and plump with feathery sepals. They open to a unique flat disc like form. My husband and I call this the “mushroom” rose as the flat disc with tightly packed petals looks like an upturned purple mushroom. The petals really look as though have been neatly trimmed to shape, he is an unmistakable rose. His colour can vary from lilac pink, through wine red to dark purple crimson depending on the growing conditions and ambient temperature. As the bloom ages the petals fade a little and often show some blotchiness, maybe this is the ‘Bizard’ colouring? A distinctive little green ‘cup’, not a button eye, appears in the centre. I don’t know of another rose that has this centre. His fragrance can be elusive. Sometimes very strong and other times faint with no rhyme nor reason for his fickleness. This is a late flowering rose for a single blooming rose. Mine often starts to break his buds in late June often as some of the other Gallicas are coming to the end of their show.

Rather a floppy growing habit so he needs a bit of support. Height around 1.25m and similar width. If you grow him on his own roots, then he will cheerfully throw up a forest of suckers. All Gallicas have the same habit and you can let the suckers spread where you have space. Alternatively, you can dig them up, pot them on and surprise a friend with a new rose for their garden.

Relatively disease free. Shade tolerant. Hardy USDA zone 4b-8b. He is a very popular rose and widely available.He has such amazing blooms that you really must include him in your collection of classic roses.

Saturday 2nd March

A petite Tea rose today – ‘Anna Olivier’- dating from 1872, bred in France by Jean Claude Ducher. A bit of a caveat, she is petite in the cooler British climate but a little more robust in sunnier climes.

A classic rose of complex colour. Of a cream base but shows pink, primrose yellow, buff, parchment, salmon, coppery apricot, and pale creamy white but always with a darker pink back to the petals. Darker hues in low temperatures. These quiet sunset or dawn colour combinations add to the charm of this elegant rose with her high centred blooms and reflexed petals. Strong ‘Tea’ fragrance. She repeat flowers very well, almost continuous in hot weather. A rain hater as the blooms may ‘ball’ and spot badly.

Large dark green foliage with new shoots of attractive bronzy red. Good disease resistance. Here in Britain, she is small, around 90cm high so ideal for containers so she can retire to the conservatory in cold wet weather. Given constant high temperatures she can reach 1.5m.

A widely available and popular rose. Of unknown parentage but she does have a few offspring. Notably a climbing sport and the fickle ‘Lady Roberts’. Predominantly a coppery apricot ‘Lady Roberts’ will often revert to her parent’s colouring.

Who was the Anna Olivier for whom Jean Claude named his rose? Usually, there are a few clues or ideas but here I cannot find a hint or whisper. Was Anna a pretty young girl or a doughty matron? History remains silent sadly. Beautiful, classical and eye catching! Do comment if you grow this elegant lady.

Sunday 3rd March

A graceful moss rose of a gorgeous colour – ‘Henri Martin’- sometimes known as ‘Red Moss’. Bred by Jean Laffay sometime before 1862 and then introduced in 1862 by the French nursery Portemer.I saw this rose on a blisteringly hot June day last year in the gardens of Mottisfont Abbey. He forms part of the National Collection of Pre-1900 roses. He was a stunning sight, a tall shrub 1.50 to 1.85m, covered in blooms. Extremely bristly stems carry clusters of well mossed mid pink buds. This softest moss, I couldn’t resist a little stroke, with an intense resinous perfume. The buds open quickly to large double blooms of rich clear crimson pink with an odd white flash. The petals reflex attractively revealing large bright yellow stamen. Variable in colour depending on temperature, he can be a crimson red ageing to a purplish hue.  A very strong fragrance, although I admit on that hot day in a sheltered walled garden the rose fragrance hung heavy in the air everywhere. Just the one single glorious flush of bloom in June but he does go on to produce little hairy orange hips in the autumn.

A vigorous rose but he is sprawly so would appreciate wall support or a frame. He tends to get a little broader than he is tall. Tolerant of poor soil and extreme heat. The foliage is a dull bright green if that doesn’t sound too much of an oxymoron! Good disease resistance as well. A popular rose so widely available. Hardy USDA zone 4b and warmer.

Named not for Henri Martin the French Impressionist painter, my first guess but for the great French historian. Henri was a good friend and colleague of Edouard Rene Lefebvre de Laboulaye and a fellow member of the French anti-slavery movement. Laboulaye commissioned the “The Statue of Liberty Enlightening the World”, gifted to the United States in 1886. A spectacular rose to catch the eye if you have a little space for him.

Tuesday 5th March

I used to only grow the older classic roses and species roses. Most of those bloomed just once so I began to add some remontant – repeat blooming- ones. A few David Austin’s were chosen, followed by some modern shrubs. Some Hybrid Teas crept in along with Floribundas and Patio roses. I have a few small low growing roses such as the Flower Carpet group in containers. These are useful on the commercial side of our property as I can move them around to brighten dull areas.

It is easy to dismiss these small ground cover roses in favour of the classic roses with their magnificent blooms and wonderful history, but these little roses are well worth considering. Inexpensive, often for sale in large DIY stores or market stalls. They are hardy, disease resistant, and bloom their hearts out all summer. As well as container roses they can be front of the border fillers or low informal hedges. When planted into weed suppressant mats you have an easy care bed that looks great all season for remarkably little effort.

I spotted today’s rose – ‘Teenage Spirit’ in a local cheap and cheerful garden centre where I buy my dog food. It was mid October, but the bushes were covered in small clusters of mid pink blooms. Large blooms as well for the size of bush, she has a maximum predicted height of just 80cm. Pretty double petalled blooms sitting in small leaved glossy foliage made an attractive sight. Ever the one for a bargain, these were £5.99, I bought three! Lacks fragrance though which is a pity.

I don’t know who bred ‘Teenage Spirit’ (ICRA name Worcasserole which is a curious name!). Marketed by the online company World of Roses in the UK, they are canny commercial growers producing endless roses named Happy Birthday, Congratulations, etc. They also name roses for your charity or a business promotion. Being a cynic, I wonder if some of their roses are recycled under different names for different occasions!

This rose is only available in the UK online from World of Roses or in the less specialist garden centres. At least this one has a name, I have bought a few just named ‘Pink’ or ‘Peach’ patio rose. Do other countries have these types of rose growing companies? If so, have a browse through their catalogues, you may be surprised by the choice.

Wednesday 6th March

Everyone has different tastes, different sizes of garden, varying soil plus a huge range of different growing conditions and also a different budget to spend on roses. When I select candidate roses to appear on this page, I am mindful of these differences, so I try to include a wide range of different types. Included are some that I don’t particularly like and wouldn’t grow in my garden. Additionally, there are ones unavailable in Britain or only available here. Yesterday we had a cheap and cheerful little British rose. In contrast today we have a rather uncommon classic old French rose – ‘Ambroise Paré’. Bred by Jean Pierre Vibert, introduced in 1846.

Clusters of long stemmed plump reddish pink buds open to magnificent full petalled rosette blooms. Initially deep cerise pinky purple with darker stripes. the odd white streak as well plus spots and speckles. He fades as the bloom matures with the petals reflexing to show a small green yellow button eye. We had a comment yesterday about bees’ attraction to fragrance. ‘Ambroise Paré has good light fragrance but the bees have to wait until the petals fully reflex to access their breakfast! The blooms fade through to whitish pink before dropping their petals. Blooms just once.

Soft green rather droopy Gallic foliage and the young leaves have a rather pretty red edging. Soft bristles rather than prickly. Good disease resistance. Grows as a tallish shrub to around 1.20m. Hardy USDA zone 4b-8b.

Named for an early progressive French surgeon (1510-90). Serving as a military surgeon Ambroise Paré developed a kinder more effective technique for wound dressing. Rather than cauterising with boiling oil (do not even think of the pain) he used a dressing of egg yolk, turpentine and rose oil. This was much more effective than the harsh boiling oil. I do not know whether the inclusion of rose oil later inspired Vibert to name this rose for him.

Small note of caution when buying. You guessed it, as there is a Tea rose with the same name bred by Moreau-Robert (1865).

One of the less known Gallicas, ‘Ambroise Paré doesn’t seem to be too widely available. Some British and European nurseries stock him and a few in the States and Canada. Certainly, worth including in your garden but if space is at a premium then there are better Gallica roses, to be honest.

Photographed at Mottisfont Abbey gardens last summer where he did look rather splendid.

Thursday 7 March.

Of all the David Austin roses I very much prefer the older ones dating from the 1980s and early 1990s. I have a couple of later ones, ‘Gentle Hermione’ (2005) and ‘The Alnwick Rose’ (2001). If the latter one declined to grow, I wouldn’t miss her. I find her blooms unsettling in a rather odd way. The recent ones just do not excite me. I expect to be struck down by a bolt of lightning having made that confession!

Today’s rose is one of the older DA’s, dating from 1983 – ‘Troilus’. This rose is now out of its breeder’s licence protection period so you can find it in a lot of nurseries and usually at a much lower cost than the newer varieties.  A rose of considerable charm with clusters of pointed buds, breaking open to a cupped large full petalled blooms of creamy buff apricot pink. He can be very variable in colour though depending on growing conditions. Fades to an elegant parchment pink as he matures, flattening out to reveal a mass of little petaloids in the centre. Strong ‘English Rose’ fragrance. The stems are strong on these early DAs, so he does not hang his head shyly and makes an excellent cut bloom.

Reaches around 1.5 x1.5m. Good dark foliage and reasonable disease resistance, better in warmer climes than damp Britain!

Another plus with these early DAs is the lineage can be given which I find interesting. David Austin, in common with other rose breeders, have a ‘stud’ of their home bred unnamed seedling roses. Whereas other breeders outcross to named roses DA stay in house as it were, this may account for the ‘sameness’ of their roses.  Troilus has the spectacular ‘Duchesse de Montebello’ in both the seed and pollen lines. Seed parent is a ‘Duchesse de Montebello’ x ‘Chaucer’ seedling with a pollen parent ‘Charles Austin’, himself a ‘Chaucer’ offspring. This close line breeding would raise eyebrows in the dog and horse breeding worlds but it is  common in plant breeding.

Named in the Shakespearean phase at DA, Troilus is the Trojan prince in the Greek tragedy ‘Troilus and Cressida’. I’m sure you can remember that from school, or at least if you had a traditional English Grammar school education.

I would certainly buy this rose for my garden, he is a very worthy inclusion whether you love DAs or are slightly indifferent.

Friday 8 March

Friday already so it’s a Friday Favourite Day. Today one of my favourite roses, although she has only been in my garden for three summers, the Griffith Buck rose “Earth Song”. Most American and Canadian growers will be aware of these outstanding Griffith Buck roses but only a few are available in the UK from a single nursery R V Roger Ltd in Yorkshire.

Copious clusters of long bright pink buds break open into large cupped double blooms, opening even larger so this is a rather over the top rose.  Blooms are of the most attractive clear bright pink, but I believe she can be almost red in some growing conditions. Fragrance is not heavy and intense but strong sweet and light. If you cut these blooms for the house, they last for ten days and the same in the garden with a neat clean drop. Said to be repeat blooming but here in Suffolk she blooms almost continuously. A late starter but then she just keeps on going, she has blooms until the New Year.

Rather Hybrid Tea like foliage, dark and shiny and completely disease resistant. A strong grower and cuttings take like a dream. She is so forward that my cuttings had buds within five weeks. Predicted height is 1.20m but she is easily 1.70m now. Not a lot of action in her first summer but she grew phenomenally fast in her second season.

Dr Griffith Buck was a professor of horticulture at Iowa State University and started rose breeding in the 1950s. He wanted to produce healthy roses that need no pesticide or fungicide, strong growers, great flowers with good scent. If that wasn’t enough, he wanted them to be hardy down to -20C and to cope with humid 30C summers. No mean task and by crossing modern hybrid teas and species rose he succeeded spectacularly. There are around eighty cultivars in commercial production today. Only nine are available in the UK and I now have them all as they have been so impressive. The UK nursery is mainly wholesale so they haven’t really pushed these roses. I hope some have made it into other growers’ catalogues, but I haven’t been able to find them yet. Some European stockists but it does not look as though these exceptional roses are in Australia or New Zealand. Please do comment if you grow her or her Griffith Buck sisters.

Ideal for a no spray garden and for those who want a minimal input rose with maximum output. Superb rose and deserves to be better known outside the States. Grow her, she will not disappoint.

Saturday 9 March

We haven’t had a climbing rose for a little while, so today’s rose addresses that omission. I spotted this one growing against a chain link fence at the far end of the Peter Beales nursery last year. A rose that vastly improved the boring fence was ‘Antique’, bred by the German nursery Kordes and introduced in 1988. Also sold as ‘Antike 89’, Kordes has an earlier red Floribunda ‘Antique’ so take care when buying.

A rose of unusual colouring. Described as a white or pale pink rose with pink crimson petal edges. Looking at the photograph please don’t think I have posted the wrong one! A very large full petalled rose so the effect is more crimson than pale pink. She produces large clusters of these attractive blooms in flushes throughout the summer. As the bloom matures the petals gently reflex so the pale pink bases are revealed giving a quieter colour. These blooms are both unbothered by heat or rain, so you get a long display. The mixture of the brighter crimson and paler pink blooms is very eye catching but not too jarring. Sadly, not a great deal of fragrance.

Rather stiff in growth habit so you will need to be training the inflexible stems quickly otherwise they will snap off when you gently bend them. She makes a good shrub as well, in fact, she was being grown as a shrub in front of the ugly fence. Large dark foliage which has good disease resistance. A little slow to get going but when she gets into her stride, she can reach up between 2.5 to 4m high. I think she would also make a great hedge with the inclusion of a heavily fragranced rose to compensate for her lack of perfume.

A very useful rose I think if you can don’t mind the poor fragrance. Please do comment if you grow her.

Sunday 10 March

There is a very beautiful early Hybrid Tea, a seminal rose in the career of the German rose breeder Peter Lambert, named ‘Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria’, for the wife of Kaiser Wilhelm, the last Kaiser of Germany. Kaiser Wilhelm’s father Friedrich Wilhelm Nikolaus Karl – also has a rose named for him, and this is today’s rose ‘Kaiser Friedrich’.

I am always ambivalent about Queen Victoria and her dynastic matchmaking of her children. Her eldest daughter Victoria had an arranged marriage to Friedrich Wilhelm, and although the marriage was said to be a contented one, she didn’t have the happiest life in Germany. Friedrich himself was Emperor of Germany for just 99 days dying from laryngeal cancer in 1888 and was succeeded by his son Kaiser Wilhelm.

Enough of history let’s get to Friedrich’s rose. A Tea rose bred in Germany by Heinrich Drögemüller and introduced in 1890. Herr Drögemüller bred and introduced just a handful of roses, eleven in number which includes ‘Kaiserin Friedrich’, ‘Kaiser Wilhelm’, together with ‘Fürst’ and ‘Fürstin Bismarck’. A man very enamoured with the German court it seems. ‘Kaiser Friedrich’ has the seed parent ‘Gloire de Dijon’ with the pollen of ‘Countess of Oxford’. The colours of these two, creamy apricot and cerise pink have blended to produce a beautiful rose. Initially he is pure mid pink when first opening, only revealing the golden petal bases as he matures. Large double form with a superb centre swirl of petals. Not over endowed with fragrance sadly.

Of his growth habit and disease resistance I can find no information. As with all Tea roses, he will prefer the heat, and is likely to have a longish blooming season.

This classic Tea rose is a rarity. I have been unable to find a stockist for him so if you grow him or know of him, please comment.

Tuesday 12 March

When I was a child I often stayed with my grandmother, who ran a small village shop, visited by everyone for groceries and the latest gossip. One customer though, never came as my grandmother delivered her groceries daily. I was allowed to accompany her but only to the garden gate. Peering through a crack in the fence I often saw a small woman sitting in the garden. ‘Who’s that lady?’ I asked. ‘Oh, that’s the lady of the lake’ replied my grandmother ‘and no more questions about the poor lady.’ Later when Sir Walter Scott’s poem ‘The Lady of the Lake’ was read to our class at school I was ridiculed after telling everyone the lady lived near my grandmother. 

Last week I revealed I am not so keen on the later David Austin roses, but today’s rose could easily find a place in my garden and not just in memory of my imaginative grandmother. That rose is the rambler rose introduced in 2014.

Large sprays of pink tipped creamy buds unfold to pale pink apricot semi double blooms. These are not so large, only around 5cm (2 inches) in diameter, but are produced in great numbers. Fading to a shell pink and then to white as the petals reflex nicely to show the golden stamens. This one is good for all bees and pollinating insects as they can easily access pollen and nectar. Zesty fruit like fragrance. Flushes of bloom through the summer and well in autumn.

The long narrow leaves are bronze touched green when young, becoming an attractive dark green later. No reports of poor disease susceptibility so I assume she is a healthy rose. For a rambler she is not too rampant, maximum height of 3.75m (12ft 6ins).

I have a pensioner of an apple tree wreathed in a ‘Wedding Day’ rambler who flowers just once, so the tree is then rather dull. I am tempted to plant ‘The Lady of the Lake’ next to this tree and train her into the ‘Wedding Day’ to make an all summer long spectacle. 

‘The Lady of the Lake’ was also the ruler of Avalon in the Arthurian legends. Today the British Parliament has a decisive and fateful vote, perhaps we may need a ruler in the Arthurian style afterwards!

Wednesday 13 March

I am charmed by today’s rose ‘Countess of Wessex’, not least because her namesake is not at the forefront of the rather ‘celeb’ younger royals. The Duchesses of Cambridge and Sussex do not yet have their namesake roses but the quiet hardworking Sophie, Countess of Wessex has this beautiful one.

Bred by the late Amanda Beales, the rose was named at the request of the Bishop of Norwich who took the marriage ceremony between Prince Edward and the then Sophie Rhys-Jones in 1999, now entitled the Earl and Countess of Wessex. Introduced in 2004 in the UK and in Australia in 2008, one of the rare Peter Beales roses available outside of Britain. I found a listing of this rose on the ‘Dave’s Garden’ website, I don’t know whether that means she is available in the States though.

Clusters of long buds with feathery sepals, these swell revealing creamy petals with a touch or two of pink. Opening to large double blooms of a creamy lemony apricot, with an egg yolk yellow centre. The outer petals reflex and fade to whitish cream as the golden stamen corona is displayed. Another good pollinating insect friendly rose. Reliably repeat blooms all summer, the photo taken in mid September on a rainy day, so some spotting has occurred. A mass of new buds was waiting to burst open so I think she would have had a good autumn show.

Not so large at 1.2m high and 90cm wide, good for a small garden or perhaps a large container. Good dark shiny foliage, vigorous growth and excellent disease resistance. Hardy USDA zone 6b -9b.

Not the flashiest of roses but a good performer if you are looking for a small shrub of this colour.

Thursday 14 March

One of the best white roses although she blooms but once in the summer – the Damask ‘Madame Hardy.’ She doesn’t fit too neatly into the Damask classification. The foliage isn’t particularly Damask like and the blooms have a Gallica appearance. I guess those who decide these things had their reasons.

I love her clusters of distinctive long feathery buds, these look like some exotic bloom in themselves. Opening to a cupped quartered form stuffed with petals of white with just a touch of shell pink. As the bloom matures it flattens becoming pure glistening white and revealing a unique green ‘pip’ in the centre. Superb fragrance, really superb! Very free flowering for the three to four weeks of her glorious flush of bloom. Graham Stuart Thomas described her as ‘This variety is unsurpassed by any rose’. Praise indeed.

She can reach up to two metres in hot climates but is generally around 1.5m in the UK. Foliage is soft light green on red brown prickly stems. The weight of the blooms will cause these stems to arch attractively. Very disease resistant, in 1998 the Montreal Botanical Garden (Le Jardin Botanique de Montreal) surveyed its established roses’ resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust. ‘Mme Hardy’ showed a 0% to 5% infection rate – classified as outstanding. Hardy USDA zone 4b-9b, she is a tough vigorous rose and one that is easy to grow. Roots easily from cuttings as well.

Introduced in 1831 and bred by Julien-Alexandre Hardy, head gardener of the Luxembourg Palace gardens, Paris from 1817 to 1859. A prolific breeder of roses, he introduced two hundred and twenty five varieties, most of which are still in cultivation today. ‘Albertine’ is one of his most famous roses.  He named this beautiful rose after his wife Félicité and you may find her listed as Félicité Hardy. Did Félicité have the ethereal splendour of her rose? I do hope so.

Any collection of classic old fashioned roses should include this rose. Grow her, you won’t regret it!

Friday 15 March

Today this is one of my favourite roses ‘Admired Miranda’. Planted way back in 1984 in memory of my lovely horse Miranda who died very suddenly with no warning when she was still a young horse with her life in front of her.

‘Admired Miranda’ is a discontinued David Austin rose as it was believed to be inferior and isn’t recommended to be grown unless you are a collector! I find this inexplicable as she is such a lovely rose. Introduced in 1982, during DAs Shakespeare naming theme. Admired Miranda’ is named for Prospero’s daughter in The Tempest.

Fat buds open slowly to a cupped mid pink full petalled bloom which is not so large. Flattening as she opens a little further revealing a beautiful quartered swirl of petals and I regularly find she has blooms of 12cm diameter (4.5inches). The outer guard petals fade to pale pink, but the inner petals hold their colour and show their rather apricot bases. A truly superb fragrance. Repeat blooms again and again and again into the winter. To my mind, she is a very superior rose.

Said not to be vigorous but mine is at least 1.8m high. I have a cutting from her, planted in a pergola and this is equally vigorous She grows on an east wall so she catches the east wind and boy she caught the Beast from the East in March last year! She probably has dry feet as she grows against the wall of the house as generally, the rain comes from the south west.

Attractive dark green foliage with puckered leaves. Reputed to be very unhealthy but I find no more so than the recent DA roses. I do spray her with fungicide but for several years I left her alone and she then suffered rust later in the season. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b.

She is still available from small nurseries, but you will need to search around a bit. She grows well from cuttings so you could always beg for a cutting if you know someone who still grows her. I would be interested to hear from anyone else that grows this special rose.

Saturday 16 March

Some time ago I found a rather tired copy of ‘In Search of Lost Roses’ by Thomas Christopher in a charity shop. Until reading this book I had no idea about the American hobby or obsession of ‘rose rustling’ where one forages around old homesteads, settlements and cemeteries searching for roses. Settlers often took cuttings of a rose from home with them on their long journeys across the world to the States. Carefully planting them in their new homes, or by a loved ones grave these roses hopped across the States losing their names but not their beauty. These found roses are carefully harvested for cuttings, grown on sometimes being identified, other times renamed and perhaps re introduced into cultivation.

Organised rose rustling seems to be confined to the States where there are responsible groups who have an etiquette around collecting rather than thoughtlessly plundering roses on private property. The Texas Rose Rustlers website (http://www.texasroserustlers.com/) is a great source of information.

Does rose rustling happen elsewhere? I am sure it does quietly. I confess to taking some cuttings from a derelict house as the rose was spilling over the crumbing fence into the road. Two months later when I passed the house again, the garden had been bulldozed as the property had been sold and the rose was gone.

After this rather long preamble we finally arrive at today’s rose ‘Josephine Land’. Discovered by Mark Nelson of Nelsons’ Florida Roses, a mainly wholesale nursery who do have some retail stock. Mark named his found rose after his maternal grandmother. A lady who raised nine children, so he says this rose is just as tough as she was.

Other than Josephine Land is pink and very fragrant I can find little further information. The small pink buds quietly open to small full petalled blooms. These flatten into very large quartered blooms that fade to white. Either single or small clusters and blooms in flushes. Dark green slightly glossy foliage and thorny stems. Hardy USDA zones 7 to 10 although this is a bit of guesswork. Seems to be a small rose from various photos on the internet.

I would be interested to hear from anyone who grows her. Or perhaps someone who grows her under her original name? Or anyone who has indulged in rose rustling and has found roses growing in their gardens? Do comment and share any photos.

Sunday 17 March

Roses are introduced today in a huge flurry of advertising and fanfare. Everyone rushes to buy them particularly if they have an appealing name or a novelty colour feature, so they gain quick and instant popularity. Some stay in cultivation for years, and others fade to obscurity even though they had good attributes. Today’s rose was not popular when she was first introduced, great blooms but poor growth, she is the early Hybrid Tea ‘Lady Mary Fitzwilliam’. Named for a daughter of 6th Earl Fitzwilliam and one of the train bearers at the marriage of Queen Victoria’s daughter Princess Helena in 1866.

Bred by Henry Bennett, one of the foremost developers of the modern Hybrid Tea and introduced in 1882. Perfect long typical HT buds of a mid pink unfurl into very large full petalled blooms. The petal backs are a darker pink so as the petals reflex and scroll you have the attractive combination of mid and light pink. It is the archetypal classic HT blooms that made her an instant success. When introduced rose showing was very popular and ‘Lady Mary Fitzwilliam’ was a superb candidate for the show bench, and a prolific winner for all who exhibited her. These perfect show stopping blooms come at some cost. The secretary of the National Rose Society is reputed to have said ‘it would be difficult to find a weaker and more unsatisfactory grower than ‘Lady Mary Fitzwilliam’.

Certainly, she is an under height rose, only around 80cm on her tiptoes, so the large blooms look out of place on such a tiny shrub. A prolific crop of her classic lovely fragranced blooms appears at regular intervals throughout the summer. She almost staggers under the burden of her loveliness.

 The first HT ‘La France’ is beautiful but sterile. ‘Lady Mary’ on the other hand is an extremely significant, prepotent parent rose. Her bloodlines run through most of today’s modern roses, with 17,628 unique descendants. This is the reason why she remains such a popular rose today and is on most, if not every, nursery list. Or is she??

Fashions in rose growing change, Lady Mary quietly drifted off and was considered to be extinct. In the 1970s she was re-discovered to great acclaim and reappeared in cultivation. Popular again because of the historical interest in her prolific influence on our modern roses. However, a fair number of rose experts consider the reintroduced rose to be ‘Mrs Wakefield Christie-Miller’, an HT bred by McGredy and introduced in 1909. That’s a discussion point that will run and run I guess!

If you are into flower arranging and love the classical beauty of the Hybrid Teas and can cope with the poor growth, then grow her. She will certainly delight and amaze all garden visitors despite her confused identity.

Tuesday 19th March

Usually when one sees a Hybrid Musk one immediately assumes it was bred by Reverend Joseph Pemberton. Today’s rose though ‘Bishop Darlington’ dating from 1926, comes from the American breeder Captain George C Thomas. He also bred all the roses with the Broomfield prefix such as ‘Bloomfield Abundance’ and the valuable rootstock rose ‘Dr Huey’.

‘Bishop Darlington’ is not such a popular rose as he tends to be tall and lacking elegance with a distinct lack of foliage. If you grow him, he will need to be at the back of the border with smaller roses or other plants hiding his nakedness. Has been described as looking better from a distance which is perhaps a little harsh.

Small clusters of long pink buds unfurl to double and semi double creamy apricot blooms. The petals have darker backs and warm peach bases giving a fine contrast. Long golden stamens are usually shyly covered by a small petal or two. He fades to whitish pink as in the photograph. Strong typical Hybrid Musk fragrance that floats on the air even on cool dull days. Flushes of bloom all summer followed by a good crop of small orangey red hips.

The scanty foliage is dark green and very healthy, he just needs more leaves to make him a garden star. Easy to grow from cuttings. Tolerant of poor soils, shade, and cold weather but as with all roses he prefers a bit of warmth when he can reach 2.5m. In the UK he is more likely to be around one metre.

Named for James Henry Darlington (1856 – 1930) was the first Episcopal bishop of Harrisburg, now the central diocese of Pennsylvania.

Parentage reputed to be seed parent ‘Aviateur Blériot’ with the Pemberton Hybrid Musk ‘Moonlight’ (featured on this page on 1st August last year). Therefore, he is classed as a hybrid Musk although he lacks the worthy garden attributes of the lovely Pembertons.

He wouldn’t be one of my choices, but Peter Beales has him firmly on their list. They are a nursery that removes poor selling roses rather smartly, so he has fans in the UK. Available worldwide where I guess in warmer climes, he performs better than the damper cooler England.

Who grows him? Do comment with your experiences.

Wednesday 20th March

I have always been intrigued by the name of today’s rose, the Noisette ‘Alister Stella Gray.’ Who was the female Stella in this man’s name or was it Stellar and someone dropped the ‘r’? After some research, I am none the wiser.

Bred by an amateur rose breeder, Alexander Hill Gray who has just this one rose attributed to him. Alexander Hill Gray was a traveller, writer, diamond hunter, and photographer. His wife Marcella Kerr died just four days after the birth of their son Alister Stella. Bizarrely Alister Stella himself married a lady also called Marcella Kerr. I will leave you to imagine the Freudian thoughts there!

Introduced by George Paul in 1894 this rambler rose remains a firm favourite today. ‘Alister Stella Gray’ produces clusters of bloom of changing sizes, small numbers in the early summer increasing to huge numbers in the autumn. His long pointed egg yolk yellow buds open to small lemony buff full petalled silky blooms showing a range of petal formations. Sometimes cupped, quartered or a charming untidy mass of petaloids but always with a button eye. The centre petals retain their colour as the outer guard petals fade to creamy white. As the season progresses the petal colour darkens to a rich apricoty gold. Repeat blooms but Graham Stuart Thomas reports his father picked a bud for his buttonhole most days from July to October, so this rose is practically continuously in bloom all summer. Buttonholes? Please someone bring them back into fashion!

A vigorous rose, he can reach 4m in height and width, so you need some space to accommodate him. He will make a large shrub as well. Small tidy fresh green glossy foliage sets off the blooms very well. Smooth stems with few thorns. Hardy USDA zone 5b-10b and he prefers dry weather, and hates damp cool days. Available worldwide

He holds an RHS award of garden merit here in the UK, but he does have a slight propensity to mildew and blackspot later in the summer so watch those leaves carefully. Slightly holds his old dying petals for longer than he needs to so deadhead if these annoy you. Well at least deadhead those you can reach.

A magnificent rose but you must have space for him. In the UK we have endless boring roundabout junctions that the councils must mow. The lack of public money though means the large space is a weedy scrub filled mess. I feel these spaces could be graced with these large ‘landscape’ roses. That’s an idea, adopt a local roundabout but do ask your council first.

(NB this post appeared in 2019. In 2022 I revisited this rose and undertook further research. The article appears as ‘Father and Son’ under the ‘Name of the rose-more of a biography’ tab on this blog.)

Thursday 21st March

Today another rose that I planted in memory of my horse Joseph who suddenly became mysteriously lame until we discovered he had a spinal malformation. Nothing could be done and as he was increasingly in pain, we had to make a tough decision.   I planted the Hybrid Tea ‘Just Joey’ to remember him but to be honest, I need to be hard hearted and replace it as the bush is on its last legs!

Bred by Roger Pawsey of Cants of Colchester and introduced in 1972. Voted into the select company of the World’s Favourite Roses in 1994. This is an outstanding rose in every way.

Characteristic long HT buds of a creamy apricot which unfurl into huge 12cm full petalled blooms. The colour? Astonishing is the word. Mainly orangey buff with apricot petal backs but as she opens her enormous blooms the petals begin to fade one by one. Beginning with the outside guard petals fading to cream so one gets the entire colour range in a single bloom, orange and copper, apricot and buff, parchment and cream, to a final white. The petals have a rather frivolous ruffled edge enhancing her charm. She does show considerable variation according to the climate, she is darker and more intense in cooler areas. Superb fragrance as well. She has it all!

Not so large at a maximum height of 1m although she can creep higher in warm areas. Good large glossy disease resistant foliage. She does not like poor soils so she will need feeding should you grow her on such soil. Not a shade lover either. Hardy USDA zone 7b-10b.

The origin of her name matches the charm of her blooms. Roger wished to name the rose after his wife Josephine known as Joey. ‘Joey Pawsey’ is not a name that trips off the tongue easily, so Roger’s father said, ‘well call the rose just Joey’. I assume he meant ‘Joey’ only but the Just was included to make a fantastic alliterative title.

After beginning this piece yesterday, I found one of my favourite nurseries has an end of season 35% off bareroot roses sale. You guessed it ‘Just Joey’ is one of the roses on the list. Took the plunge and placed an order (plus a couple of others!). I return home from the Netherlands this weekend so I will have a busy week without rose planting, but you have to grab opportunities when you can. My elderly ‘Just Joey’ will go to the compost heap and a new one will keep my horse Joseph’s memories alive.

Friday 22nd March

When starting to research this rose, I typed in ‘Regensburg’ and got a white Floribunda so take care with your spelling! ‘Regensberg’ is a product of the great Northern Irish rose breeding family McGredy after they moved their entire rose business across the world to New Zealand. Sam McGredy IV has concentrated on breeding striped and ‘hand painted’ roses, and ‘Regensberg’ is considered to be one of the best hand painted. A self explanatory term, the bi-coloured petals look as though someone has been out with their paintbrush.

Introduced in 1979 this rose is a ‘Patio’, she rarely gets her head above 30cm unless you are in a warmer climate than the UK when she may be a touch taller. The fat green buds open to a pale pinky white. Unfurling to show a lipstick pink centre, patches of this pink appear on the outer petals looking for all the world as though someone sprayed an aerosol of paint on them. The pink slowly spreads through the petal surface, the backs remain white, becoming much brighter as the bloom opens but retaining the white edges and bases. Finally flattening out the bloom is astonishing. Hot pink petals trimmed with white lacy lines and often with a white streak, surround a white centre in which a golden stamen corona nestles. For a small rose the blooms, which arrive in clusters, are large at 10cm. Rarely without a bloom for the entire summer and she has a light sweet fragrance as well.

Small dark foliage with bronze red tinged new shoots, very disease resistant. Hardy USDA zones 4-9 but she can get nipped by late spring frosts so needs a little protection.

Often grown as a ‘bedding’ rose, this is how I have seen her growing here in the UK. I think she would be better as a single specimen, less is more I believe with her. I don’t have her in my garden, but she will be there soon in a container outside my stables!

Named after the German city of Regensberg but she may just be sold under some alias names. Her ICRA appellation is MACyoumis, this was originally MACyou but this was withdrawn. Also sold as ‘Young Mistress’, this name too has been withdrawn. These two are a little un PC? She might appear as ‘Buffalo Bill’ in the States and I have also found her as ‘Twins of Regensberg’. Tiresome these multiple names!

A real wow rose and so useful. Front of the border, container, small informal hedge perhaps. I love the colouring, but I can see that she could be a bit startling for some people. Who grows her? Do comment.

Saturday 23rd March

I saw this rose last summer for the first time, how could I have missed her! This is the American bred Floribunda ‘Ebb Tide’, from the nursery of Tom Carruth a prolific breeder of fine roses, introduced in 2001.

A rose that has an old fashioned feel about her, if I had read she was introduced in 1880 I would have believed it. It is her colour that gives this feel I think together with the rather untidy petal formation. A deep moody violet purple, full petalled blooms that appear in small clusters. Often with a midline white streak or a small white fleck on the petal edge. Cupped shaped to begin with before flattening and revealing her golden stamens. The petals have a white base which accentuates this stamen corona, rather like yesterday’s little rose ‘Regensberg’. Fades to a rather smoky lilac grey as the bloom ages. Sharp spicy fragrance

‘Ebb Tide’ is a rose that varies considerably in colour depending on the intensity of the sun. Cooler damper weather gives a deep dark colour, but brighter warmer weather produces a paler version. Reputed to scorch in full sun, a lot of these dark crimson or purple roses have the same problem. You need to carefully place them, so they get the sun but not the hot scorching noon and afternoon sun otherwise you end up with blooms looking like a milk chocolate rose.

Typically, a short grower here in the UK, only 38-56cm high but I guess taller in warmer countries.

Variable reports on her health and growing habits. Some growers comment on just average or poor growth with a propensity towards blackspot and mildew. Others report good health so maybe she is picky about her locality. If you grow her do comment on these aspects, good or bad, it’s all helpful.

 I can’t make my mind up on whether I like her or not. Falls into my mmmm category. Am I being too hard on her?

Sunday 24th March

An appropriate rose for today, ‘Smarty’ bred in the Netherlands, posted on the day I leave the country to return to the UK. Dating from 1977 and introduced by Dickson Nurseries Ltd. Her seed parent is the equally cheerful shrub, the pinky purple ‘Yesterday’.

A charming quiet rose and often described as the perfect shrub. Small clusters of buds spring up early in the season, then she is off into bloom and she continues until late autumn. The small buds open to small single delicate pale pink blooms with a large yellow stamen crown, reminiscent of our wild hedgerow roses. All bees and pollinators love this rose as they can easily harvest the pollen and nectar. The blooms fade to pearly pink and then through to white before neatly dropping. Quickly replaced by another bud cluster springing to bloom. Sweet light fragrance completes the picture!

Described as a ground cover or procumbent rose as she has a spreading growth habit and is reputed to not get too high. I have seen her at a height of around 90cm and a lot taller. The photograph of the bush, taken at the Peter Beales garden last September, shows she can easily be around 1.20m. Tidy neat bright foliage with excellent disease resistance. A prickly lady though, even the bloom stalks are spiky!

An easy simple rose to grow but probably not one for a choice spot in your garden. Tolerant of a little neglect and some shade. Her spready habit makes her a good candidate for informal hedges. I often see her lining Dutch streets on the outskirts of towns. I wish that UK town streets were as decorative!

Tuesday 26th March Jeanne de Montfort

A moss rose today, I love these roses for the double hit of rose fragrance and the balsam spice of the ‘moss’. Reputed to be one of the tallest with the most moss – ‘Jeanne de Montfort’. As I typed that I thought ‘the most moss is a claim that I seem to have written before’ so perhaps that can be taken lightly.

A tall rose for sure as you can see from the photograph taken at Mottisfont Abbey Gardens last June, but I failed to get a close up of the moss. Vigorous growth habit more so than the commonly grown ‘William Lobb’. ‘Jeanne de Montfort’ can stretch to over 3m high but usually is content at 1.85m. You will need space, not a small garden rose at all.

Clusters of red buds heavily covered in bronzy moss open to pretty pink flat full petalled blooms. The petals often have darker flecks and an odd white streak adding to their appeal. Opening out to reveal a golden yellow stamen corona, another rose for the bees. Fades quietly to pale pink and then to white. Heavy strong fragrance but she is a one trick pony, just the single flush of June bloom with a scatter of late blooms in a good summer. Glorious sight when in full bloom.

Bred by the French nurseryman Robert and introduced in 1851. Named for the Duchess of Brittany (1295-1374), known as ‘La Flamme’, she was a fiery lady who defended both her husband’s and her son’s rights to the title during the Breton Wars of Succession. After lobbying Edward III for military assistance, she ended up a political pawn imprisoned in Tickhill Castle, Yorkshire where she died.

Reasonable disease resistance, the moss roses can get mildew on their moss late in the season, particularly in damp humid weather. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b.

This large landscape rose will not be for everyone but if you have space and love the moss roses then you might consider her.

Wednesday 27th March

When selecting roses for the daily post I always try to get a good range of different rose classes each week. Today the beautiful Hybrid Musk ‘Penelope’.

Dating from 1924 and bred by the Revd. Joseph Pemberton.  For this rose he probably didn’t use his favourite ‘Trier’ parent rose but Ophelia, an HT for the seed parent and an unnamed seedling as the pollen parent. However, I see that ‘Botanica’s Roses’ suggests the pollen parent could be ‘Trier’ or ‘William Allen Richardson’ so some uncertainty over parentage here.

‘Penelope’ produces large clusters of small orangey pink buds which unfurl to the loveliest pearl pink semi double blooms. Ruffled petals with a slightly darker peach pink back. As the blooms open you get the delicious combination of peach, pearl pink to white accentuated by a golden stamen crown. Reputed to be a rose where the spectacle of the bush in full bloom looks better than an individual bloom. I think that’s a little hard as these small to medium size blooms are full of charm.  Strong musk fragrance that lifts in the warmth of the day to scent the garden around the bush. Flushes of bloom through the summer into late autumn, she is almost better in the autumn than the summer. That golden crown of stamens is a magnet for pollinators which means you will get an exceptional crop of hips. Uniquely the young hips look dusty with a fine bloom on them like a grape, maturing to a coral pink and contrasting nicely with the late blooms

Happy healthy foliage that is dark red when young, moving to a dark shiny green later. Very disease resistant as are all the Pemberton Hybrid Musks. She can reach 3m in hot climates but generally is around 1.5m in both height and breadth. Reputed to hate pruning so she will need space to spread her lovely stems. Hardy USDA zones 5b-10b. Widely available, and she is a good candidate for cuttings.

Joseph Pemberton was well versed in the classics naming most of his roses after characters in these mythological tales. Penelope appears in Homer’s Odyssey as the wife of Odysseus. She was a very chaste lady despite many suitors when Odysseus was off fighting another war, so her name is associated with marital fidelity. The actual Greek meaning of Penelope could be some kind of bird or a cunning weaver depending on the translation and the etymologist!

Graham Stuart Thomas considered ‘Penelope’ to be one of the finest garden roses. His planting suggestion includes grey foliaged plants with pale blue flowers to frame this exquisite rose. Those who grow her will not be disappointed I promise.

Thursday 28th March

An early David Austin rose today dating back from 1969 so long gone from the David Austin catalogue but still a great favourite in Australia, ‘The Yeoman’. David Austin started his nursery in 1970 so this rose was one of the first ‘English’ roses along with ‘The Knight’, ‘The Prioress’, ‘Wife of Bath’, ‘Canterbury’ and ‘Dame Prudence’.

We are accustomed to the DA roses having either good repeat flowering or almost continuously in bloom. The early ones, however, lacked this attribute and bloomed once with occasional blooms later in the summer. ‘The Yeoman’ also blooms once although I read from growers, he is an excellent repeat blooming rose. Perhaps he prefers the sun and warmth of the southern hemisphere?

Clusters of attractive coral buds open out to full petalled flattish blooms of exquisite colour. The outer guard petals are pale pink, but the inner petals are a glorious peachy pink with glowing yellow bases. It is said that when this rose is in bloom he looks as though a lightbulb is shining in the centre, a delightful description. A truly beautiful rose with a strong myrrh fragrance.

Reputed to have poor disease resistance here in the UK hence his removal from the catalogue. Now we have warmer and dryer summers this rose would probably thrive very well. Good dark foliage sets off the blooms very well. Not overly tall at around 1m. Hardy USDA 5b-10b. Cannot find him available in the UK but still sold in Germany. Available in the States and Australia.

David Austin used ‘The Yeoman’ in the English Rose breeding programme, so his genes run down through a lot of the DAs. Interestingly Griffith Busk also used ‘The Yeoman’ when developing his extremely tough hardy roses. ‘Distant Drums’ and ‘Country Song’ are both first generation children of ‘The Yeoman.’

A wonderful rose and although no longer available here at least he grows in other countries to delight gardeners. Please comment if you grow him.

Friday 29th March

Today the happy little patio rose ‘Honey Bunch.’ Bred by Anne Cocker of Cocker Roses in Aberdeen Scotland and introduced in 1989.

This looks to be a very attractive rose, so I was slightly surprised to read the description in Botanica’s Roses that the colour is overpowering and this rose is best placed by itself in a single variety planting. I have seen roses of much more startling colours, ‘Masquerade’ for example which makes me shudder.

‘Honey Bunch’ produces clusters of small peachy orange buds opening to semi double honey and pink blooms. The wavy edged petals have a lemon yellow base giving the centre of the bloom a real glow. This little rose is similar colour wise to yesterday’s ‘The Yeoman’. Good fragrance as well and she obligingly blooms in flushes all summer.

Take a little care when buying as there is an orange patio rose named ‘Honey Bun.’ The ICRA appellation for ‘Honey Bunch’ is COCglen so that will ensure you get the right rose.

Maximum height of 50cm so very suitable for the smaller garden or front of the border. Ideal container rose. Good glossy foliage and good disease resistance. Hardy USDA 6a-10b.

I love the intense blue of the geranium Rosanne thoughtfully planted beside this rose, a great colour combination. This is such a charming little rose, so she is on my list for my container collection.

Saturday 30th March

A number of you may be familiar with the white Damask rose ‘Léda’ with her crimson pink edged pink smudged petals, also known as the ‘Painted Damask’. Today we have her sport ‘Pink Léda’

Is ‘Pink Léda’ a sport though? There is an ongoing discussion about whether she is the sport or is it the other way around. Did the pink form spring from the white or the white from the pink? An answer lost somewhere in the nineteenth century. The white rose is said to have originated in England and has always been popular in the UK. However, ‘Pink Léda’ comes from somewhere on the continent and was the preferred choice in France. From that information, I would hazard a guess that some bushes of ‘Pink Léda’ were imported to England and the white ‘Léda’ was the sport. Both are identical in every way apart from the bloom colour.

Long feathery sepalled dark pink buds appear in clusters.  Extraordinary buds really, they have a ‘mutant’ appearance. These open to double flat blooms of the clearest pink which reflex to show little yellow button eyes. An untidy petal arrangement but I so much prefer this to the modern neatly petalled roses. A sumptuous heavy intense fragrance, you cannot get a better one! A single wave of glorious bloom in June and she shuts up shop although she may offer a few late blooms. This is a rose that you will need to prune after she has finished blooming in June, she blooms on the previous summer’s growth. Prune her in the winter with the rest of your repeat and continuous roses and you will not get her spectacular show of bloom.

Height around 1.20m and a little narrower. Soft green foliage that has fairly good disease resistance. Prickles, boy is she a prickly lady! Hardy USDA zone 4b-9b. Widely available.

Named for the Greek mythological ‘Léda’ daughter of the king of Aetolia, Thestius. Wife of King Tyndareus of Sparta she caught the eye of Zeus who transformed himself into a swan and seduced her. This seduction scene of ‘Léda’ and the Swan became a popular subject for Renaissance painters.

A superb classic rose that would grace any garden although she blooms just once. I often advise followers with smaller gardens to include just one of the Pre-1900s roses in their garden. Would ‘Pink Léda’ be the one for you?

Saturday 31st March

I am not a ‘hot’ holiday fan, I do not do beaches, or cruises. However, I think I would like to visit Bermuda to see today’s rose which has naturalised across the island, the China rose ‘Cramoisi Supérieur’.

Let’s safely say this is a rose of unknown breeding but a lot of claims for the breeder. Reputed to be a seedling from ‘Slater’s Crimson China but she could be an unknown bred before 1818. Perhaps unknown Belgian breeding before 1823 or maybe French from Cocquereau 1832. Possibly Cocqurel 1832 or the Italian Villaresi 1832. We know she was introduced by the French nursery of Jean-Baptiste Paillet in 1834 as the superior crimson ‘Cramoisi Supérieur’. As well as the multiple claims for breeding her she has gathered an impressive number of aliases: Agrippina, Bengale à petals striées, Bengale Cramoisi Supérieur, Bengale éblouissant, Bengale Oeillet, Bermuda Wingood China, La Gaufrée, Lady Brisbane, L’Eblouissant, Mableton Crimson China, Old Bermuda Red Rose, Queen of Scarlet, Queen’s Scarlet, Rosa Indica Caryophyllea.

 China roses like sunny sheltered positions but this one can cope with poor conditions. In the UK she is a small wiry little shrub around 1m high suitable for containers, border front and smaller gardens. Put her in a warmer dry climate and she can reach 2m happily. Sparse long pointed foliage, characteristic of Chinas, but very healthy. Drought resistant as well. All useful attributes for the busy or lazy gardener! Widely available across the world.

Clusters of small buds on airy stems unfolding to medium sized double cupped blooms of clear crimson often with a flick of white. These delicious cupped blooms reflex and flatten attractively revealing their golden stamens. Fragrance reports vary from ‘not very fragrant’ to ‘delicious strong raspberry.’ She is more perfumed in hot climates or when grown here in the UK in a sheltered warm spot. Blooms in flushes but can be continuous in favourable weather.

A useful rose but certainly not a boring one. I think a lot of potential growers are deterred by the fragile look of China roses. She copes with oppressive heat in Bermudan summers and gales with tremendous rain. Grown in central Europe she bends but not bows under snow and frost. Consider her if you have a space for her crimson beauty.

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February 2019

These posts originally appeared on my Facebook blog Rose of the Day.

1 February 2019

Alleged to be one of, if not the best, crimson Hybrid Tea rose. Introduced in 1963, from the famous nursery of Meilland, – ‘Papa Meilland’ and named for the breeder Alain Meilland’s grandfather Antoine. For those who are new to roses, Alain Meilland’s father started the nursery and bred the world’s most famous rose ‘Peace’. The nursery continues to produce outstanding roses, Alain himself introduced over two hundred and eighty roses.

‘Papa Meilland’ is a classic Hybrid Tea rose, long elegant pointed buds, always one bud on a long stem making him a superb rose for cutting and exhibition. Those buds unfurl to a large high centred crimson bloom that is held up high above the foliage. Velvety petals, around 35 of them, often have a small thin streak or splash of white. As he matures the petals reflex strongly giving the characteristic rather pointed silhouette of the Hybrid Tea. Intensely perfumed, said to be one of the strongest fragrances in the rose world. Repeat blooms reliably.

Feted with many awards, he sits in the World Rose Hall of Fame. An important parent rose he has seventy five descendants including a climbing variety which is identical but not quite as free flowering.

This is a rose that divides rose lovers. Some love it, others hate it, and someone of us, me included are indifferent to its charms. You know I am not a great lover of the reds. His fans love the perfume, the velvet petals, and those long stems that may ensure first prize at the rose show.  Why do others dislike him so much? The foliage, dark and leathery, is susceptible to both mildew and blackspot so he needs a regular dose of fungicide to keep him healthy. He can be very slow to establish around two to three years before he gives his best. Surprisingly not that hardy, a cold hardy winter will kill him even here in Britain.

Jokingly I will say that like a lot of men, he needs care and cosseting to give his best. If you are a gardener who prefers easy roses with high disease resistance, then Papa Meilland is not for you at all. Those who love him forgive his problems and breathe his wonderful fragrance all summer.

Saturday 2 February

I often wonder whether doctors and surgeons watch medical soap operas. Do CID officers watch murder serials? Should they watch do they grind their teeth and mutter over the errors? BBC Radio 4 has a certain long running soap based on the everyday story of country folk ‘The Archers’. At the sound of the first notes of the signature tune I usually retune the radio but sometimes I catch odd snippets. Let me tell you that life as a farmer is absolutely nothing like that portrayed and as for the daft errors, they leave one speechless. However, I must be in the minority as it is the longest running radio soap in the world so it must be popular.  Today’s rose is named for the mythical village where the drama is set – ‘Ambridge’.

A rather lovely David Austin rose, an older one dating from 1990. No longer in their catalogue and its plant patent has expired so you can find it propagated and offered by other nurseries now. Still a very popular rose. Creamy peach buds on long stems open to very full petalled apricot pink blooms. Initially, cup shaped the blooms flatten to a rosette shape and fade to pale pink. Strong myrrh fragrance. Repeat blooms consistently throughout the summer.

On the small side only around 75cm to 1m and a little wider. Upright but quite bushy in growth habit. A good candidate for a container. Said to be shade tolerant. Hardy USDA zone 5b-10b. Some growers report that she ‘balls’ in wet weather. Disease resistance is somewhat variable with reports of mildew and blackspot but may well depend on where in the world you are. The seed parent is ‘Charles Austin’ who also has this variable disease issue.

I would be interested to hear your experiences if you grow her.

Sunday 3rd February

Today a rose for which I can find remarkably little information. The national collection of Pre-1900 roses is held at the National Trust property Mottisfont Abbey in Hampshire. There are some later roses in the garden, and today’s rose is one of those, the Hybrid Wichurana ‘Snowdrift’, introduced in 1913. Growing on a frame in one of the beds this rose was a breathtaking sight, really appearing to be covered in snow

Large clusters of round greenish white buds open to small pure white double blooms with a contrasting golden stamen crown. Good strong fragrance. A strong vigorous grower, all Hybrid Wichuranas ramblers need space. She can reach nearly 4m in height so the Mottisfont gardeners must prune her hard to keep her within bounds on her frame. Characteristic light green shiny foliage and I guess she will have a good crop of hips later in the autumn.

Bred by Michael Walsh, a Welshman who emigrated to the States in 1875 and worked as head gardener in Woods Hole, Massachusetts for Joseph S. Fay. He clearly had a very accommodating and supportive employer, as he ran a large and successful rose nursery from their property. Michael bred over forty roses, notably, Wichurana hybrids, his most well known roses are ‘Lady Gay’ and ‘Excelsa’.

I have been unable to find a stockist in the UK. Helpmefind lists just two nurseries in Canada but I have found the information on stockists is not always up to date. Perhaps she is available in the States somewhere? She is a superb rose and such a pity that she is not more widely available.

If you grow her please comment and give your experiences of growing this splendid rose.

Tuesday 5th February

A little rose of many names, I promise that I don’t search these out. I select a likely candidate rose and start my research with half an idea that an old rose may have been christened a few times.

Today a Tea rose dating from 1846, bred by a gardener with the surname Guillot, first name unknown, at the Chateau d’Azelles, Pont de Chéruy, He named her ‘Danzille’ and passed her onto Jean-Baptiste André Guillot of Lyons. I would like to think there was some family relationship here, but nothing recorded. Jean-Baptiste was the breeder of ‘Madame de Watteville’ (featured on this page on 23 January 2019) and his nursery Roseraie Guillot remains, six generations later, a major rose breeder in France. Jean-Baptiste renamed ‘Danzille’ as ‘Madame Bravy’, but she has throughout the years acquired the appellations – ‘Adèle Pradel’, ‘Danzille’, ‘Isidore Malton’, ‘Mme Denis’, ‘Mme de Sertot’, ‘Mme Maurin’ ‘Alba Rosea’ ‘Josephine Malton’. This is enough to make one weep! I wonder if this is some kind of record of aliases? However, she was first sold as ‘Madame Bravy’ therefore the relevant authorities consider this to be the correct name so it’s the one under which you will find her for sale. Who was Madame Bravy? The wife of a G. Bravy of the Société d’Horticulture de l’Hérault. I assume someone that Jean-Baptiste wished to honour or flatter, or more likely Monsieur Bravy paid a handsome sum for the naming rights.

I found this comment on her names in The Rose Annual (Royal National Rose Society) 1975 38-53. Tea-Scented Roses A Survey L. Arthur Wyatt.

 
“Although ‘Niphetos’ was also used for breeding, of even greater importance was ‘Mme Bravy’, sent out in 1846. This is an excellent grower, very free with its cupped cream blooms with pink overtones and a fragrance which has been likened to “expensive face-cream”. In the days when honesty in the horticultural trade left much to be desired, unscrupulous nurserymen across the Channel found it financially expedient to cash-in on the high reputation of ‘Mme Bravy’ by re-introducing it at various intervals under no fewer than six names. English growers, caught by this deception, expressed their annoyance in the gardening press in no uncertain terms … and the annoying practice persists”

Charming large cupped blooms with outer petals of soft creamy pinky white with short central petals of shell pink. Her strong fragrance is said to be that of raspberries or perhaps the aforementioned expensive face cream! Blooms in flushes throughout the summer. ‘Madame Bravy’ is a small rose, only around a metre in height so an excellent rose for a container. Good light green foliage and said to be very hardy, USDA zone 6-11.

Sadly, she doesn’t seem to be available in Britain. It looks as though both David Austin and Peter Beales stocked her in the past but no longer. I see several nurseries in the US, Europe and Australia are alleged to stock her, I haven’t checked each one. It would be great to hear from someone who knows or grows this petite beauty.

6th February Wednesday

Perfume is a very personal thing.  My mother wore ‘Chanel No 5’ which I confess almost made me sick as a child, and I haven’t improved with age. Mind you I think my mother soaked herself in it! I prefer light woody perfumes and have been known to wear aftershave before it was fashionable to do so. Today’s rose carries the name of a rather heavy perfume Nahéma by Guerlain. I dislike the perfume, but I certainly like the climbing rose ‘Nahéma’.

Coming from the French breeder Delbard one can expect a rose with superb fragrance and this one doesn’t disappoint. An intense zesty fruity fragrance that carries in the air. Lipstick pink buds unfold to a classic soft pink bloom. Large cup shaped and very full petalled, a joy to see, flattening out as they mature and revealing small central quills.  She produces a lot of bloom in glorious flushes throughout the summer. Her foliage is quite dark and glossy which provides a good contrast to the blooms.

Interesting breeding as she has a Delbard seed parent the Hybrid Tea ‘Grand Siècle’ and a David Austin pollen parent the large shrub rose ‘Heritage’. She appears to have been bred in the 1990s but was only introduced in 2006. Unlike her namesake perfume, she has been a successful rose from her introduction. The perfume ‘Nahéma’ was initially not popular and caused Guerlain some financial angst before it was relaunched with a slightly different formula.

Predicted maximum height at 3.5m and rather narrower. One can see from the pruning and training posts on climbers that the height and width are under your control or they should be. The Delbard website states she has ‘bonne résistance’ but some growers report she suffers from mild black spot.

A superb rose to climb over a pergola on a terrace so you can sit underneath her in the evening with a cold beer and breathe in her fabulous fragrance.

Thursday 7 February

I have featured a couple of roses recently that are unavailable in Britain which makes a bit of a change from the ones that are only available here. When I selected today’s rose, I thought ‘well this one will only be available here which will cause some teeth gnashing from my overseas followers’. However, according to the ever useful helpmefind website she looks as though she is available in the US and Germany. A rose bred by Amanda Beales, the daughter of Peter and introduced in 2006 – ‘Festive Jewel’.

Clusters of fat bright pink buds unfurl to a classic Hybrid Tea shaped bloom with a high centre. The young blooms are of a bright salmon pink but this fades to a charming apricot pink as the bloom flattens revealing a big golden stamen crown. The petals have a delightful wavy edge. Strongly fragranced, her pollen parent is the highly fragranced Portland rose ‘Comte de Chambord’ which has passed on the scent genes. The clusters of bloom are carried on strong stems, so she makes an excellent rose to cut for your house.

She is a fairly large shrub or a small climber if you prefer. Predicted max. height is around 1.5m with a breadth of 0.9m. Glossy bright green foliage, such a good contrast to the bright pink. Healthy as well. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b.

Her name flummoxed me for a short while. She was named by the St Edmunds Lodge of Norfolk Freemasons to raise funds for Masonic charities. I assume a proportion of the sales went to St Edmunds Lodge. But why a Festive Jewel? Of the joys of writing a rose blog, I find myself reading all sorts of seemingly unrelated material! The Freemasons support a lot of charities and run rather original fundraising events. These events are known as Festivals, each province running one every eleven years with each Festival lasting five to ten years. At the end of the Festival, a banquet is held, and the final amount is revealed. The ‘Jewel’ is a medal awarded to those who contribute funds. There is a whole hierarchy of members involved in this, this is a bit outside Rose of the Day I feel. However, I will look at the rather rundown grim Freemasons lodge in the local town in a new light now. So, to bring the story to an end, the rose is called after the Festival Jewel.

The Peter Beales roses are often only available from their nursery. I wonder if the Freemason connection is related to the wider availability? I don’t have this rose in my garden, but I feel I should make space for her. The blooms are exquisite with such good colour, and the fragrance is wonderful. I do hope that you can find her in a nursery near you. Please do comment if you grow her or have seen her for sale outside Britain.

Friday 8th February

Another Friday Favourite, – the Portland Rose ‘Comte de Chambord’. I mentioned this rose yesterday as the Comte was the seed parent of ‘Festive Jewel’.

I can perfectly understand why ‘Comte de Chambord’ is a favourite rose. The blooms are fantastic, and the fragrance is out of this world. A French rose, you guessed that from the name, introduced sometime around 1860 and bred by Robert and Moreau. We often don’t get any idea of the lineage of these older roses as they were naturally not hand pollinated. However, with this rose, we know the seed parent was the gloriously fragrant Hybrid Perpetual ‘Baronne Prévost’ with the ‘Portland’ rose providing the pollen.

Attractive buds with long feathery sepals either in small clusters or singly, these buds swell to fat little globes and the blooms almost pop open. Large very full petalled blooms, sometimes quartered, of deep pink with paler outer petals. Just heaven to look at and even better to bury your nose to inhale his strong sweet fragrance. A big initial flush of bloom and then a quiet almost continuous wave of bloom throughout the summer. Not a lover of wet weather when his blooms will ‘ball’ but more come along quickly to replace the spoiled ones.

Attractive greyish green foliage, on stems with crimson prickles and thorns. A soft contrast to the blooms. He is a bit of a martyr to black spot though, so you will need to spray him to keep him at his best. Quite upright in growth and fairly tall, he can reach just under 2m. I do prune this rose reasonably hard as he grows in a rather windy open area and the long stems either break or get whipped to a thread.

Named for Henri, Comte de Chambord, a member of the Bourbon family. Briefly, he held the French throne as Henry V from the 2nd to the 9th August 1830 before being deposed. Another rose namesake played a small part here. Following the July Revolution Charles X, Henri’s grandfather abdicated, and the throne passed very briefly, twenty minutes, to Louis Antoine, Duc d’Angouléme. His wife the ‘Duchesse d’Angouléme’ has a namesake rose. Louis abdicated in favour of Henri, but after seven days the National Assembly decided Henri’s cousin Louis Philippe of Orléans was the rightful heir. Like the Duchesse d’Angouléme, Henri went into exile in Britain, retaining the title Comte de Chambord as the fabulous Château de Chambord was his only property in France. Curious that two roses are named for players in this struggle for the French throne.

History aside, ‘Comte de Chambord’ is a rose very worthwhile growing if you love the classic pre-1900 roses and can just give him a small amount of care. He will reward you with those stupendous blooms and superb fragrance.

Do let me know your favourite roses and I will do my best to feature these on the Friday favourite slot.

Saturday 9 February

I have a fairly broad taste in music, but when in my study writing and researching these posts I usually listen to classical music. Occasionally one will hear the folk song ‘Blow the Wind Southerly’ sung by the great English contralto Kathleen Ferrier, considered to have been one of the greatest singers in the world. A great singer deserves a great rose, today we have the Floribunda – ‘Kathleen Ferrier’.

This rose is a large Floribunda, so large that most nurseries classify her as a shrub rose, she can easily reach over 1.5m. When I photographed her in the Peter Beales garden in September last year, I had to stand on tip toe to get a shot of the pretty blooms. Large clusters of bloom on long stems held high above the foliage are a lovely sight except when one has a camera! Attractive crimson buds open to crimson semi double blooms which fade to a pink with a touch of salmon. These open to a flat saucer shape, displaying the white petal bases and the golden stamen crown. The bees will love you if you plant her in your garden, but the stamens do turn brown a little too quickly. Sweet light perfume, it was a dull drizzly day when I visited the garden, but the scent was very noticeable. Some growers report little or no fragrance but it’s definitely detectable. Flushes of bloom throughout the summer.

‘Kathleen Ferrier’ was bred not by an English nursery but in the Netherlands by Buisman and introduced in 1952 just a year before the death of Kathleen Ferrier. I hope she was able to see her fabulous namesake rose. The pollen parent was the charming 1920s Hybrid Tea ‘Shot Silk’, who passed on her lovely colouring to her daughter rose.

A vigorous rose with healthy shiny dark green leaves, the new growth has a striking bronze tinge. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b.

She will need a bit of space but if you are looking for a simple charming rose then she fits the bill nicely.

.Sunday 10th February

A very lovely Gallica rose, photographed in June at Mottisfont Abbey Gardens in Hampshire, this is ‘Président de Sèze’. A rose renowned for the range of colours displayed. The plump buds appear in small clusters and are lipstick crimson, but as the bloom emerges the hue changes to bright pink with paler petal backs. The outer petals fade first to a pale pink, lilac, pink tinged cream and finally almost white whilst the central petals retain their colour for longer. These stupendous large blooms are very full petalled with a delightful muddled quartered formation. Flattening as they age to show a mass of central quills and a greeny yellow eye. Just stunning! An equally fabulous fragrance, strong and intense.  However, you can’t have it all as the Président has just one glorious flood of bloom in June. Foliage is rather pale but very healthy, much more so than most of the other Gallica roses.

Tall arching growth, around 1.20 – 1.50m tall but narrower at .90m. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b. Gallicas are fairly tough roses and cope with poor soil and drought.

Introduced in 1836 and bred by an amateur rose breeder Madame Hébert from Rouen. Not too much is known about Madame Hébert, she could have been the wife of Michel Hébert, public prosecutor at the court of Rouen or another Madame Hébert an actor resident in Rouen at the same time. I think an actor would have been too busy to breed and grow roses, but a lawyer’s wife would have the time and wherewithal for this hobby. As a lawyer’s wife Madame Hébert would have known of the French lawyer, Raymond de Sèze, the defender of King Louis XV1 in the French revolution and named her rose for him.

A small squabble over the identity of this rose and another ‘Jenny Duval’. Some authorities believe these two are the same, but Gallica rose aficionados dispute this entirely. ‘Jenny Duval’ undergoes a similar colour change as she blooms which may be the source of the confusion. Whether anyone has looked at the genome of these two I don’t know.

Should you want to add this beautiful rose to your collection you will need to pay attention to the identity. This can be tricky I know with a disputed identity, talking to the nurseries is usually the best method to ensure you gain the correct rose. ‘Jenny Duval’ is also a super rose.  If anyone grows both, perhaps they can comment on the similarities or differences.

Tuesday 12 Feb

A striped rose today, I am partial to a stripy and this one ‘Red Intuition’ comes from one of my favourite rose breeders the French nursery Delbard. She is a sport from a bright red Delbard Hybrid Tea ‘Belle Rouge’. Discovered in 1999, it must be very exciting to find such a superb sport, but not introduced until 2004. There is a little bit of genome instability in this line as ‘Red Intuition’ went on to sport the charming ‘Pink Intuition’ who hit the market the year before her parent.

‘Red Intuition’ is described as a ‘Florists’ rose, this is a Hybrid Tea grown for the florist market. Florists roses are usually grown under glass, and may not be as hardy as a typical Hybrid Tea. I see the USDA zone for her is 7b and warmer. I see she is available in the southern US, Australia and Europe. I can’t find a stockist in Britain and she doesn’t appear on the Delbard website.

Characteristic HT high centred blooms so you get an amazing swirling pattern of petals of dark red with streaks, freckles and flicks of dark pink. Rather like exotic icing on very fancy cupcakes. Fragrance doesn’t get a great mention, but it would be an unusual Delbard to be poorly scented. Almost continuously in bloom though as compensation.

Tall, around 1.5m with glossy healthy foliage. She sounds like a fabulous rose but perhaps our cool summers (well not last summer!) might not be to her liking. I would be interested to hear from those of you who grow her.

Wednesday 13 Feb

I am fond of the stripy roses, but I also love those combined pink, peach, apricot, lemon and buff tones found in some roses. The changing graduation in tones as these blooms mature is superb and draws one back throughout the day to have another look. Today’s rose has those subtle tones, the Hybrid Tea – ‘Rachel’.

A small caveat there with the name, sorry as I found yet another rose with several names!  Bred by Hans Jurgen Evers of the German nursery Tantau and introduced in 1999 as ‘Augusta Luise’ with the ICRA appellation ‘TANgust’.

(For new followers who may not know this system. An International Cultivar Registration Authority (ICRA) ensures that the names of plants are not duplicated. The rose ICRA is the American Rose Society. Each rose has an exhibition name, in this case, ‘Augusta Luise’ and an ICRA appellation. This appellation has the first three letters of the registered breeder so TAN for Tantau and then a short name so ‘gust’ is used here. Although duplicate exhibition names are not permitted there seem to be a lot of them, the rose will only have one ICRA ‘code’ name. So, if you really want to check you get the right rose ask the nursery using that code name.

‘Augusta Luise’ is also marketed as ‘Rachel’ in the UK, ‘Hayley Westernra’ in New Zealand. Keeps one on one’s toes this naming business, and please pay attention with this rose as there are at least ten other ‘Rachels’!

Name issues dealt with so onto the lovely rose herself. The clusters of buds are coral pink, and initially the blooms are also the same coral pink Good HT high centres so the lovely swirl of central petals have an apricot tone. As the bloom flattens you get this wonderful fading of the coral pink to apricot, pale pink, honey, peach and finally a pinky buff. Truly wonderful and that’s not all as she has a superb fragrance. Flushes of bloom throughout the summer.

Dark glossy foliage but varying reports on black spot resistance. Predicted height 0.7-1.2m. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b. Widely available.

A rose that one could find a space for, I think!

Thursday 14 Feb

Red roses and St. Valentine’s day go hand in hand so today we have a red rose. You may remember that red roses are not my favourite colour. I do, however, like single roses so we have a kind of compromise a single red rose – ‘Altissimo’.

An appropriate name for a climbing rose – ‘Altissimo’ meaning the highest. Not a rose in the first flush of youth but a grand older lady dating from 1966 from the French growers Delbard. An immensely popular rose and looking at the photograph of her bloom one can see why. Spectacular saucer shaped blooms of five petals but she may add one or two more. An absolutely true red, with no white base and the petal back is the same colour. This eye opening colour sets off the large yellow stamen crown perfectly. These blooms occur in small clusters and she flowers fairly constantly through the summer. Not the greatest of fragrance but has a light clove scent.

A vigorous rose, the stems are rather stiff, so you need to train this rose when the stems are pliable. The second photograph shows her being grown as an informal hedge where the long stems have been trained horizontally onto wires. This ensures that the buds break all along the stem rather than a cluster at the end which is waving at the house gutter. She can reach 3m when grown as a climber, but you can grow her as a shrub but again pull those stems down. Either peg the ends of the stems down or tie weights on them.

Dark foliage with new purplish growth so the red blooms really pop. If you don’t deadhead, she will reward you with a great crop of hips. Very disease resistant. Hardy USDA zone 5b and warmer. This rose has won a shedload of awards and medals and is a consistent winner for those who show roses.

An important parent rose as well with 179 descendants. The striped climber ‘Crazy For You’ (‘Fourth of July’) is a first generation child and ‘Hot Chocolate’ is a second generation offspring.

A superb rose if you have a little bit of space for a shrub or a big wall.

I see one of the alternative names for ‘Altissimo’ is ‘Sublimely Single’. Mmm, perhaps not such a great rose for St Valentine’s day!

Friday 15 Feb

Today we have the Friday favourite, the old Gallica – ‘Tuscany’ also known as the ‘The Old Velvet Rose’. This last name is an apt one as the petals have a wonderful velvet look and texture.

The rosarian Graham Stuart Thomas considers this rose to be one of the very best Gallicas whilst admitting that the fragrance lets her down a little. She dates to around 1600 and is believed to be the ‘Velvet Rose’ described by the herbalist John Gerard in 1596. A venerable lady indeed.

Plump purple buds unfold into the most beautiful bloom. Intense purple maroon colour with a high contrast from the copious golden stamen crown. Occasional white flecks. Flat saucer shape and critically 25 to 28 petals, I will come back to the petal count later. The fragrance is good and strong but whether it isn’t as good as other Gallicas I will leave you to test.

She is a small shrub around 1.25m and will sucker if you grow her on her own roots. Dark foliage that can be susceptible to black spot. Only the one magnificent flush of bloom in June and she retires for the season.

There is another ‘Tuscany’ rose, this is a later introduction and is thought to have been a sport of ‘Tuscany’, this is the much more widely available ‘Tuscany Superb’. Introduced in 1837 from an English nursery, Thomas Rivers & Son. Why is she superb? Well, she grows rather larger at 1.50m high and the foliage has larger luxuriant leaves. The blooms are much larger, and the colour is reputed to be more intense. Same velvet texture and also a few white flicks. Large golden stamen crown but there are fewer stamens. I have posted two photographs. ‘Tuscany’ from Mottisfont garden so that is the correct rose and ‘Tuscany Superb’ (TS) from my own garden. If you look at these two you will see the difference in the stamens. The petal count is important here. ‘TS’ has 35-70 petals compared to the 25-28 of ‘Tuscany. ‘TS’ has less perfume and a tendency to fold her petals over her face hiding the stamen crown. She also will produce small hips, Tuscany doesn’t. Single bloom period for ‘TS’ but I do get odd late blooms

Both hardy USDA zone 5b-8b. Neither has an ICRA appellation so you will need to be sharp eyed to get the correct one. Does anyone grow both in their garden? Do you see the differences? Do please comment.

 Saturday 16 Feb

Last Friday 8th February we had a favourite rose ‘Comte de Chambord’ (or perhaps ‘Mme Boll’) and today we have his seed parent the early Hybrid Perpetual ‘Baronne Prévost’. Bred by the French breeder Jean Desprez in 1841 who then sold his rights to this rose to Pierre Cochet for a hundred francs. Approximately £358 today but a better indication using the average 1840s wage in France of around 2.5 francs a day estimate the rights to this rose were sold for around six weeks’ wages. This rose became very popular, I wonder if Desprez regretted the sale. Today ‘Baronne Prévost’ remains one of the oldest Hybrid Perpetuals available.

Jean Desprez named his rose for the sister, Mme. la Baronne Prévost, of his Dahlia growing friend Guenoux.  I haven’t been able to find out anything about this Prévost family, if anyone knows any more perhaps you can comment?

The dark pink buds are large and globular, opening to sizeable blooms 15cm in diameter. Flat fully petaled in a quartered formation, bright pink to begin with before fading to a soft mid pink. A few quills surround a little yellow button eye. A very pretty rose with a strong fragrance. Graham Stuart Thomas relates that this rose repeat blooms all summer, but other authorities report a large summer flush with occasional later blooms.  A strong ros,e and a long lived one as well. She is often found as a venerable lady growing in derelict gardens having survived neglect and changes in fashion.

Tall and upright in growth habit, up to 2.5m high and around 1.2m wide, a little shorter in cooler climates. Attractive foliage but not completely black spot resistant. A tough rose and hardy USDA zone 4b and warmer.

‘Baronne Prévost’ has been known to ‘sport’, producing the two striped sports ‘Baronne Prévost Marbrée’ and ‘Panache d’Orléans’. David Austin used the Baronne’s ‘son’ ‘Comte de Chambord’ to produce ‘Gertrude Jekyll’ and ‘The Countryman’.

This is a truly fabulous rose. The RHS encyclopaedia of roses rates it highly and states that she should be one of everyone’s top ten old roses. Praise indeed! She needs a little space and perhaps some fungicide, but I think you wouldn’t be disappointed if you grow her.

Sunday 17 Feb

During the 1980s David Austin was going through a bit of a Shakespearean naming phase and this rose is named for the heroine of The Merchant of Venice- ‘Wise Portia’.

A rose of great promise and wonderful colours. Sizeable light crimson magenta blooms that gracefully fade to pale magenta and then lilac. Full petalled rosette formation with a strong fragrance. The blooms last well when cut for the house. Reliably repeat blooms from summer to autumn.

Search for her though in the UK and you would be very lucky to find a stockist. Did she fall victim to fashion and slip into obscurity? She has a lot of superb attributes but a lot of poor ones as well. The availability in Australia and the southern US gives the clue, she was an unhappy rose in the cool damp summers of the 1980s. A heavy sufferer from both blackspot and mildew, her heavy blooms hung damply on their weak necks. Foliage wasn’t very special, and the growth was spindly. However, transport her to hotter dryer climates and you have a very different rose. The disease issue abates, the growth is strong, and the foliage is what one expects of a rose.

‘Wise Portia’ lineage

Today I have included a photo of her ‘pedigree’. I have compiled vast genealogical trees of my own and my husbands’ families so these trees appeal to my slightly OCD nature. I find it interesting looking at these pedigrees of roses as line breeding – breeding with close relatives – is commonly found. Friday’s favourite Tuscany’s offspring ‘Chianti’ is there on both the seed and pollen lines. ‘Wise Portia’s lovely colour comes down this line.

Not a rose for the UK but given climate change perhaps she might be a happier rose than in the past. I guess she may well still be cossetted in an English garden. Do you grow her or know of her? Did you consign her to the bonfire? Do comment.

Tuesday 19 February

Fine tea, fine J class yachts and a five time gracious loser in the America’s Cup. All attributes of a wealthy self made man and today we have his namesake rose ‘Sir Thomas Lipton’. Sir Thomas was Scottish by birth, but his rose comes from America. Bred by Dr. Walter Van Fleet in Watsontown, Pennsylvania, one of the twenty nine roses bred by this amateur breeder.

Introduced in 1900 by Conard & Jones Co and considered by many to be one of the finest early Hybrid Rugosas. Slight doubt over the order of parentage, which is the seed or pollen parent. One obviously must be a Rugosa – Rosa rugosa f. alba Rehder in this case. The other parent is the charming polyantha ‘Clotilde Soupert’ featured earlier on this page on 30th January, 2019. Breeding roses must be tremendous fun. From the same breeding lines, there is a delicious pink Hybrid Rugosa ‘New Century’.

Very similar to ‘Blanc Double de Courbet’ but perhaps a better rose.  ‘Sir Thomas Lipton’ has blooms of pure icy glistening white but just occasionally a paintbrush touch of pink appears. Clusters of fat little buds open to rather small blooms with a muddled petal formation, rather camellia like, that flatten later to reveal golden stamens. A huge flush of bloom initially and then he just keeps on blooming all summer. Of course, the strong Rugosa perfume drifts on still air so you can scent him before you see him.

Dark foliage with puckered leaves, a bit of a tendency towards rust and blackspot, unfortunately. A tough rose in other respects to heat, drought, poor soil, and cold damp weather. Strong growing, often considered to be a climber more than a shrub. You can grow him as either, but he can reach 2.5m high and around 1.5m in width. He is a very thorny rose, described as ‘an evil fur’ by one grower. Don’t plant him where you need to brush past him!

Wednesday 20 Feb

A rose that will certainly wake you up this morning. An American bred Hybrid Tea from the prolific nursery of Jack E. Christensen, introduced in 1984 – ‘Voodoo’.

Long elegant buds with elongated feathery sepals burst open to a large fully petalled orange bloom. Just how bright and orange she will be is going to be dependent on the temperature. Some growers describe her as salmon pink, yellowy orange, pink orange, even a red orange. She can display all these combinations as the high centred bloom unfolds so the petals reflex. The photograph shows her fading to a lovely lemony parchment. Variable reports on her fragrance from nothing to powerful, but as we have previously discussed fragrance can be elusive for some people in some growing conditions. I often comment that a rose has good fragrance only to receive a message or a comment that the rose has poor fragrance and vice versa.

Repeat blooms so well that she is almost continuously in bloom. The blooms as carried on long stems so a great rose for flower arranging, even my sort of flower arranging which is popping blooms straight in a vase!

Typical HT dark glossy but leathery foliage, good contrast to the bright blooms. A strong growing rose and healthy, well the odd report of late black spot. If you live in an area where black spot is prevalent then you may need to keep an eye on her. Upright in growth habit, reaches around 1.5m in warm climates but shorter in cooler areas.

Widely available in the States, Australia and New Zealand. I haven’t been able to trace a British or European stockist. Perhaps if you know of such a stockist you can comment?

Her strong colours may need careful placing in the garden to not jar the eye too much. Of course, colour placement is a very personal choice. A great rose that gives a good display for minimal input. I often say for lazy gardeners but that might be construed as a bit of an insult although I don’t consider myself to be an industrious gardener.

Thursday 21 Feb

A rose that surpasses everything? That’s a tall order I think, but that’s the translation of ‘Surpasse Tout’. However, not all rose authorities agree on this sentiment though! A fine Gallica rose dating from around 1792 or perhaps 1832 or even 1814. Let’s just say she is an old rose bred by someone whose name has been long forgotten.

Globular buds of dark pink open to cupped blooms of a rich carmine pink. These are large blooms and very full petalled, these petals have a rather mottled appearance with darker veins and paler backs. As the petals reflex, she fades to a pale cerise, the bloom flattens so the yellow button eye is shown in the centre of a swirl of petals. These beautiful blooms appear in clusters of around 3-7 on longish stems. Strong intense fragrance. Just one glorious burst of bloom though. I photographed her on an extremely hot day last June at Mottisfont Abbey gardens. She does have a lot of spent blooms, as the hot weather had been very intense that week.

A vigorous rose with bushy branches of the typical ridged foliage of the Gallicas. Practically thorn and prickle free. Not so large at 1.25m high and about 1m wide so good for a smaller garden or the front of the border. Hardy USDA zone 4b-8b. Having the one single bloom period means that you will be pruning her after blooming. Not hard just removing some older stems and branches.

She has a few additional names, ‘Belle Junon’, ‘Junon’, ‘Cerisette la Jolie’, ‘Cramoisi Triomphante’ and ‘Rouge Agréable’. In the tradition of these older classic roses, some of these may well be different roses entirely. Not so helpful when you are trying to buy this rose so pay attention when perusing the rose catalogues. Most nurseries offer her as ‘Surpasse Tout’ though.

A beautiful classic old fashioned rose that will bring joy and grace to your garden.

Friday 22 Feb

Today’s Friday favourite is the David Austin climbing rose ‘Wollerton Old Hall’.

Bred before 2010 from un named David Austin seedling rose, and introduced in 2011 as a shrub rose. However, the vigorous growth soon meant she moved into the climber section. Initially, the maximum predicted height was around 1.5m, now it is 3.75m. Curious that the vigour and height were not noticed during the extensive field trials!

Pointed apricot buds with a streak of dark pink unfurl to warm buttery yellow full cupped blooms. The shape of these is highly characteristic of the later David Austin roses. The petals have the ‘heart’ shaped wavy edges and are recurved, that is folded over the centre of the bloom. Rather peony like in fact. The colour fades through pale apricot, buff parchment, cream and a pink touched white. Highly variable depending on the climate.

Strong perfume, myrrh with hints of citrus which sounds delicious.. I was a bit surprised to find another grower describing the fragrance as medicinal. Maybe there is a hint of the typical yellow rose ‘edgy’ scent in this rose perhaps.

The DA website reports this rose is happy in all aspects. Perhaps if you grow ‘Wollerton Old Hall’ you can relate your experiences.

Named for the gardens of Wollerton Old Hall in Shropshire. This is on the opposite side of the country to me, so I haven’t visited them. From their website, the gardens appear to be truly magnificent.

Saturday 23 February

I usually post a rose under its exhibition name, but I was sent today’s rose under its alias, so I am using this name – ‘Rose of Narromine’. An American Hybrid Tea bred by Dr. A. Michael Dykstra in 1997 and introduced into Australia in 2010 by Swane’s Nursery. 

For those unfamiliar with Swane’s Nursery, they are one of Australia’s premier rose nurseries. Originally based in Sydney, they have a large rose Farm in the town of Narromine, NSW, hence the name of this rose.

A spectacular rose of pink and yellow tones. The petal bases are yellow with hot hot pink edges. The glowing yellow centre, a true ‘Heart of Gold’ gives this rose its exhibition name. The intensity of the colours will be dependent on the temperature, the higher the scale the hotter and brighter those colours. Large blooms as well of around 13cm with a strong beautiful fragrance. 


Not a rose for the small garden perhaps as she has a predicted height of 1.6-1.9m. Good disease resistance. Hardy USDA zone 7b-10b. Availability? Certainly, in the States and Australia but I haven’t been unable to find her elsewhere. There are two other Heart of Gold roses, so much for the International Cultivar Registration Authority (ICRA) not allowing duplicate names! ‘Rose of Narromine’ has the ICRA appellation ‘WEKdykstra’, the other two are ‘MACyelkil’ 1987 McGredy and ‘COCarlotte’ 2001 Cocker. These two are rather similar coloured roses as well. Perhaps if you love these hot sunset colours then the two other ‘Heart of Gold’ roses may fill the slot?

I love this photograph with the frilly petal edges. Do you grow this rose? Do share your comments and thoughts.

Sunday 24 Feb

I would love to know how this rose got its name, but it is a ‘Tall Story’! Honestly, I have not been able to find the reasoning behind the name.

This rose is often described as a procumbent rose which leads one to believe it will be 2m wide and maybe 50cm high. Certainly, it makes a rather loose and lax shrub. You can peg it down, this is where you literally pull the long flexible canes down to the ground and fix them with pegs or weights. A small note here though. Make sure the ground underneath is free of any perennial weeds. The best method is to remove all weeds, and cover with weed suppressant fabric and bark chip mulch. Unless of course, you enjoy weeding amongst the thorns! This method can be used on climbers as well, so they are horizontal climbers!

Without pegging down ‘Tall Story’ makes a 1.2m x 1m shrub but she is better with some form of support frame when she may reach up to 2m. Clusters of charming lemon buds open to semi double lemony blooms with an absolutely glorious golden stamen crown. Crowded with stamens of varying lengths, just beautiful. As the blooms mature the outer petals fade to a pale lemon white boosting the glowing golden centre. Reliable repeat blooms through to the autumn. Intense fragrance which unusually remains strong throughout the day into the evening. Rose fragrance is released as the temperature climbs in the morning and the volatile chemicals disappear throughout the day so evening scent is usually never that strong.

Bred by the famous Northern Ireland nursery of Dickson and introduced in 1984. Unusual cross with a seed parent the Floribunda ‘Sunsprite’ and a pollen parent of the rather small patio Polyantha ‘Yesterday’. It must be a great gift to select good parent roses, but I think all breeders are sometimes surprised by the children!

Healthy shiny mid green foliage provides a good foil for attractive blooms. Hardy USDA zone 4b-9b. Available in Britain, Europe and the States. Not sure about Australia though.

I saw this rose at Peter Beales nursery last September and thought she was very attractive. As I have been researching and writing this post, I am kicking myself for not buying her. She sounds such a star and I have a place for her where her fragrance could drift over our terrace. I will have to trip over to Peter Beales on my return from the Netherlands and buy a container plant!

Tuesday 26 February

I am a big fan of the Hybrid Musk roses. They are tough and hardy, great foliage with usually good disease resistance, pretty blooms that repeat all summer well into late autumn, and good fragrance. They are also accommodating roses coping with poor growing conditions and a bit of neglect.

Today’s rose is one of the Reverend Joseph Pembertons’s less well known Hybrid Musks, the lemon coloured ‘Daybreak’ dating from 1918. Joseph Pemberton bred around 52 roses in between his clerical duties and his charity work. Some of these are now no longer commercially available and are likely to be extinct unless they survive in an old garden. The popular ‘Prosperity’, Penelope, ‘Francesca’, and ‘Felicia’ are widely seen but what happened to ‘Joan’? Slid into oblivion it seems.

Seed parent is the seminal ‘Trier’, a favourite seed parent for Joseph’s roses. ‘Pax’, Felicia’ and ‘Moonlight’ are all first generation ‘Trier’ children. The ‘Trier’ ‘bloodline’ runs down into four and a half thousand roses, so it is indeed an important rose.

‘Daybreak’ shouldn’t be lost to the rose growing public. She has clusters of fat bright yellow buds held up on chocolatey brown stems. Opening to large pale yellow semi double blooms, the petal formation can be described as loose. Large dark golden stamen crown, good for the pollinators. She has a rather blowsy untidy appearance but in a way that adds to her charm. The petal colour fades to lemon then a lemony white. A bit of a tendency for these old faded blooms not to drop cleanly but to hang as unappealing brown ‘crisps’, her only fault really. She needs either dead heading or a bit of a shake to encourage her to let go.  The fragrance is the typical strong intense Musk. Repeat blooms all summer into late autumn.

The young foliage is a dark bronzy brown which turns in time to dark green. Sets off the yellow and lemon blooms very well. Compact bushy growing habit and she will easily make 1.5m in height and around 1.25m wide. Hardy USDA zone 4b-9b.

This is a rather understated rose really which may account for her drifting out of popularity. It would be a shame to lose her as her good points outweigh the poor point of a messy petal drop.  I accept that tastes in roses change over time, but I think this rose is still worthy of a place in a classic rose garden.

Wednesday 27 February

On a little bit of a theme here as today we have an unusual, and also a rather rare rose today, the charming China rose – ‘Papillon’. Peter Beales has this rose in their catalogues as a pink ‘China’ with a probable introduction of 1882. Other authorities have another rose, a pink Tea rose, dating from around 1881 from the French grower Nabbonand. Other reports that ‘Papillon’ is a medium red. When Peter Beales are alive, he spent a lot of time ensuring that the identification of these older roses was correct. When he found he had misidentified a rose he was honest and admitted the error. Researching this rose and comparing photographs I think the rose featured today is the French Tea rather than the China.

Small bright pink buds develop rather pale pink feathery edges as they begin to unfurl. Almost looking as though the bush is suffering severe drought or heat stress. They continue to open into a cupped bloom, opening further to a typical ‘China’ loose untidy petalled rose. The deep veined petals have rather ragged edges with curious colouring. Pinky white with copper tones, white splashes and a big untidy golden stamen crown. The petals look rather butterfly like hence the name. Very free flowering, continuously through the summer and well into autumn.

Good healthy foliage with new growth of coppery green. I love roses with these different coloured young growth as this provides more colour in the garden and a great contrast to the blooms. Slow growing but should reach 1.2m in cooler climates but often reaches 3m in hotter areas so often grown as a climber or pillar rose. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b.

Availability? Well depends on which one! The China is fairly widely available, but the Tea is not. Peter Beales are out of stock for this season, but they take orders for next winter. They may well have container grown plants in the summer though.

I am interested to see if any of you grow this version of ‘Papillion’ or the China variety. If you do perhaps you can post your comments and photos? If you don’t have any current photos perhaps you can take your camera out when she is in bloom and message these to me?

Thursday 28 February

Today a climber, from the German nursery Kordes, introduced in 1996 so she has stood the test of time, – ‘Jasmina’. One of their Arborose series which are climbers that promise to give more bloom than the average climber.

Large clusters of round pale greenish white buds, touched with pink, unfold into fully petalled cupped blooms of an old fashioned classic appearance. You could easily mistake her for a David Austin rose with that round cupped quartered petal formation with those wavy petal edges. Her colour is a violet toned pink, but she does show considerable variation according to the climate. The hotter the temperature the paler pink she appears. Fragrance is said to be sweet and fruit like, but some reports of a sharp unpleasant fragrance. Sense of smell is in the nose, or more correctly in your genetic makeup, so different people can smell undertones imperceptible to others. She is a little bit of a head hanger so the higher she grows the better you can appreciate the blooms. Certainly, with large heavy blooms she needs a strong support frame and will need hard pruning in the dormant season back to the wall otherwise she could suffer from broken branches. Blooms in flushes throughout the summer. A few reports that the blooms may ‘ball’ in damp humid conditions.

Glossy healthy foliage, the breeders claim high disease resistance but again some growers have experienced blackspot. If you are in an area where blackspot is prevalent then you may need to pay attention to her. Tall bushy and vigorous growing habit and reputed to have good cold resistance as well. Hardy USDA zone 5-9. Predicted maximum height is around 2m with a 1m width so she is a good climber for the smaller garden.

Widely available in Britain, Europe, the States and Australia. Australian gardeners may find her listed as ‘Climbing Jasmina’.

This does sound like a worthy rose to grow. Any comments, positive or negative, welcome as potential growers will find these useful.

January 2019

The posts below originally appeared on my Facebook blog ‘Rose of the Day’

Tuesday 1st January 2019

I admit to saving this rose for today with her most appropriate name for New Year’s Day. ‘Champagne Moment’ a German bred floribunda introduced in 2005 and had her champagne moment in 2006 when she was ‘Rose of the Year’.

Neat little buds of a rather bright orange appear in the dark glossy foliage. As these swell, the colour becomes less vibrant moving to a peachy pink. The clusters of full petalled blooms open to a pale cream pink with a warm peach lemon centre. Reliably repeat blooms all summer. I photographed this one in early September and she was full of buds. A light sweet fragrance, some reports of no fragrance

Not a large rose, only 90cm x 60cm. A good candidate for the front of the border, or a large container. I have seen her as a low hedge where she did look stunning.

She has a couple of alternative names. In Canada she is sold as ‘Lion’s Fairy Tale’ and in the US and it appears in the rest of the world she is known as ‘Lions-Rose’. This last name is her registered exhibition name, and the ICRA name is ‘KORvanaber’. ‘Champagne Moment’ seems to be reserved for the UK market.

Vigorous and with excellent disease resistance. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b.

Wednesday 2 January 2019

A simple soul this morning, and one that is easily overlooked. The Revd Joseph Pemberton and his sister bred superb roses creating the Hybrid Musk group in the early 1900s. Sadly some are now no longer in commercial cultivation but the better known ones such as ‘Penelope’, ‘Felicia’ and ‘Moonlight’ are still popular. Rightly so with their delicious fragrance, attractive blooms and their extremely long blooming season. ‘Moonlight’ has a scattering of her small white blooms today. I digress; however, today’s rose is one of the lesser known Hybrid Musks, the cerise pink ‘Vanity’.

I wonder why she is not more widely grown? She is large around 2m high and a little narrower at 1.5m. An open growth habit, Graham Stuart Thomas recommends growing three together, so they can support each other. That’s fine if you have a lot of space but problematic in a smaller garden. Perhaps just one grown next to white or pale pink companions of a bushy habit would help. She is a vibrant cerise in early summer so not good next to yellows, or reds unless you like a wake-up call when you visit her. She mellows as the season progresses becoming a little softer, this photo was taken in mid September.

Large sprays of bloom are produced in flushes through the summer. Single petalled and these petals have a nice wavy shape adding to her charm. Good for the bees and other pollinators. She starts off blooming a bit late and then continues into autumn and early winter which is a useful attribute. As the blooms mature the vibrant cerise fades to bright pink, mauve and then a lilac grey so always something of interest there. Copious small orange hips follow so you will get a mixture of late bloom and early hips in the autumn. She isn’t as intensely fragranced as her sisters but still has that ‘musk’ fragrance which is detectable at some distance.

Hardy USDA zone 6b – 10b. Vigorous with good disease resistance.

If you have space, she is well worth considering. You could grow her as a bushy climber or at least against a wall or perhaps a small tree. ‘Vanity’ would be a better name I think for a very full petalled classic old rose rather than this simple quiet elegant rose.

Does ‘Vanity’ grow in your garden? Do you love her understated elegance?

Thursday 3rd January

This photograph reminds me of very over the top wallpaper, a real riot of colour to brighten your January morning. A Bourbon rose from the French breeder Laffay, introduced in 1852 ‘Sir Joseph Paxton’. Named in honour of the great English gardener, architect, MP, creator of the conservatory at Chatsworth House and the Crystal Palace, and instigator of the commercial cultivation of the world’s most widely grown banana the ‘Cavendish’ banana. I wonder what he did in his spare time. This rather extravagant rose seems to be appropriately named.

The large full petalled blooms are of a bright crimson with paler petal edges in a quartered structure. Sir Joseph looks a little like ‘Mme Isaac Pereire’ but he is somewhat paler in colour, and not quite as intensely scented. This is a great pity as from all other aspects he is a rose well worth including in your garden. Repeat blooms very well, almost continuous really. However, I happened to be looking at the David Austin website this afternoon and looked at their description. They say no repeat blooming. I wonder if this is an error as all the other authorities have him as a reliable repeat bloomer.

Medium height, around 1.2m but some reports that he can be taller in a hotter climate. A very soft grey green foliage, the perfect foil for the bright colour of the blooms. A slight tendency to black spot later in the season. Fairly thorny and prickly. Hardy USDA zone 5b-10b.

I don’t grow him, the photo was taken in mid June at Mottisfont Abbey. Does anyone have him in their garden, or know him? Would be interesting to hear others experience of growing this spectacular rose.

Friday 4th January

Today’s Friday Favourite is the Multiflora rambler ‘Ghislaine de Féligonde’. One of Angela Bokor’s five favourites, thank you Angela. The second photo was taken at Mottisfont Abbey this summer.

She is a rose once seen in full bloom never forgotten and deserving to be considered the best of the Multiflora ramblers. Not as vigorous as some in this class, she won’t take over your entire garden or house. Maximum predicted height of 3-4m or you can grow her as a bushy shrub where she will reach around 2m.

The buds are a creamy orange, however, this is a rose that does show considerable variation in petal colour so you may find the buds are more vibrant. The large semi double blooms open to a soft apricot and fade quickly through lemon and cream to white. Later in the season when the weather is cool she will have a distinctly pinker tone which lasts much longer. She produces clusters of bloom which get progressively larger towards autumn which is a pleasing feature. The flushes of bloom are long lasting as well. I will point out that some authorities don’t consider her as a reliable repeat flowering rose. Perhaps if you grow her you would like to comment on your experience of this? A delicious musk fragrance which carries across the garden.

Bright glossy foliage identical to her seed parent, the rambler ‘Goldfinch’. Thornless but the new growth has small bristles. I like thornless climbers from the pruning and training point of view!

A French rose bred by Turbat and introduced in 1916. The naming story is very appealing. Turbat had heard a story from the WWI trenches. A young officer, the Comte de Féligonde, had been left to die of his wounds in No Man’s land. His wife Ghislaine was a Red Cross nurse and she ventured into the dangerous area. On finding her husband she dragged him back behind the lines and nurse him to health. Turbat was impressed by this heroic tale hence the name of the rose. A lovely story except it is not true. A French researcher looking at the de Féligonde family history discovered that Ghislaine was the daughter of the Comte Charles de Féligonde and his wife Odette and born in 1914! It is more likely that a friend of both the de Féligondes  and Turbat suggested the rose should be named after the young daughter.

Widely available. Hardy USDA zone 5b

5th January 2019

I think every time a David Austin rose appears on this page we will remember his huge influence on modern rose breeding. Today we have the most attractive ‘Wisley 2008’ not to be confused with the earlier mid pink ‘Wisley’. ‘Wisley 2008’ supplanted the 2004 ‘Wisley’ when the disease problems became apparent. Named of course for the famous Royal Horticultural Society gardens in Surrey.

An elegant rose with the signature full petalled shallow bowl shape found in many DA roses. A very soft classic pink with paler outer petals, they are a bit pink spotted with rain here as this photo was taken in early September. The website description reports the bloom resembles ‘Konigin van Dänemark’, I don’t see the similarity as Konigin has a tight quartered rosette shape of darker pink.

Almost continually in bloom. Healthy and vigorous. Hardy as well. Widely available.

The fragrance? Well, all DA roses have good fragrance. This one is described as fruity with hints of raspberry and tea. Mmmm I will leave that one for you to decide.

6th January 2019

It’s all in the name as the cliché says and today, we have a rose for whom this is true. The glistening pure white ‘Frau Karl Druschki’. Classified as a Hybrid Perpetual some authorities consider her to be a Hybrid Tea, not least because her pollen parent is the famous HT ‘Caroline Testout’.

Bred in Germany by Peter Lambert, introduced in 1901 and named for the wife of Karl Druschki the president of the Germany Society of Rose Friends. The Druschki family lived in Görlitz on now what is the German – Poland border. The name is problematic for non German or Polish speakers, I speak some German and would say Drus-she but that might not be quite correct. It is believed that this pronunciation difficulty combined with the hatred of all things German in WWI lead to her alternative names. ‘Schneekonigin’ – ‘Snow Queen’ but still German so not so much of a change but she is sold under both aliases. The French ‘Reine des Neiges’ also translates to Snow Queen. ‘White American Beauty’ is the English version however, in the UK and Europe she is usually found as ‘Frau Karl Druschki’.

One, if not the purest white rose to be found. ‘Iceberg’ has a greenish tinge, but the Frau is really icy white although there is a slight lemon hue in the centre. Long stems with a perfect typical HT scrolled bloom which unfurls from a bright pink bud. The mature buds reveal golden stamens. She has always been a popular exhibition rose and invaluable to flower arrangers. Not a single scintilla of fragrance so you need to place her next to a fragrant neighbour. She will ‘ball’ in wet weather and will suffer pink ‘spotting’ when raindrops hit the open blooms.

Tall at 1.8m with large pale foliage and vicious scimitar like prickles, not to be planted where you brush past her. Vigorous and one for the secateurs every winter. Hardy USDA zone 4b but susceptible to mildew. Widely available.

One rarely finds named roses in paintings or literature, but this rose appears in Radclyffe Hall’s The Well of Loneliness.

I am not so keen on these very white modern roses, but I can see they have their place but not with me. Does she brighten your garden, or do you curse her spotting and ‘balling?

Tuesday 8th January

I have a horse who sees Pokémons. These invisible visions cause him to rapidly perform a 180° degree turn and attempt to remove himself at some speed from the spooky apparition. I have some sympathies with him when looking at today’s rose. I love striped roses but this one, the Floribunda ‘Abracadabra’, is just a little over the top for me.

The unusual colour combination of a rich reddish brown and creamy lemon is an eye opener. Initially, the red is brighter with a vibrant lemon, both colours darkening as the bloom matures. The petals have a velvet like appearance looking all the world like an exotic creation from an exclusive chocolatier. Imagine snapping off a chocolate petal! The colouration is variable with some blooms of full red brown, a few with half full red brown and the remainder of the splashed flecked stripes. Some very splashed and freckled and others with a few faint streaks. A rose that would make you visit her daily to see her ever changing show.

Attractively shaped blooms, not so large and double petalled. A weak elusive fragrance with some reports of no fragrance at all. Repeat blooms in flushes. The rather matte foliage gives a pleasing contrast. Fairly small, around 80cm but she may be larger in hotter climes. A very heat tolerant rose as well.

Her name? She is a sport of ‘Hocus Pocus’ so what else could she be named? ‘Hocus Pocus’ is identical to her daughter but a miniature. ‘Hocus Pocus’ was bred by the German nursery Kordes and ‘Abracadabra’ was introduced by them in 2002. Her ICRA name is KORhocsel and the reason for giving you this information is a later, 2004, introduction by Kordes of another ‘Abracadabra’. This later one, also a striped, is a gentler carmine pink and cream with the ICRA name KORamsaro. One wonders why they couldn’t have been more imaginative as there must have been some confused buyers. A further warning that there is also a 1991 HT ‘Abracadabra’ that is pink but seems to be only available in the US.

A fascinating rose but I don’t think I have a place for her in my garden. Like my horse, I think I would shy away from her. Love her or loathe her? Do comment.

Wednesday 9th January

A quieter rose for you this morning but a rather lovely one. ‘Gardeners’ Gold’ named for the fiftieth anniversary of the BBC gardening programme Gardeners World.  Gosh, fifty years must be a record for the BBC who frequently axe well loved programmes.

Bred by the Hertfordshire nursery of Harkness and introduced in 2017. In common with most other rose breeders Harkness are now breeding roses that are both easy to grow and with excellent disease resistance. During the trial period of seven years, this rose was never treated with any fungicide. Being a picky scientist, I could read that thinking it may have had some fungal infection which was never treated as the rose is a very strong vigorous one that could shrug off a spot of black spot. That is just me being cynical!

Charming clusters of semi double blooms of bright yellow, this photo was taken late in the season, so he is a bit more lemon in hue. Very free flowering according to the Harkness website and with a light fruity fragrance.

Not a large climber which is very useful, maximum predicted height and width of 2m. Many modern houses don’t have too much wall space and are easily swamped by the older climbers with their 3-4m height and similar breadth. This is a rose that will be happily gracing the rather bland frontages of new homes owned by busy people out at work all day. He could grow in a large container. I mean a really large container. I see endless photos on FB of roses in tiny containers with requests ‘What is wrong with my rose?’. The simple answer is ‘Its shoes are too tight!’. Roughly the size above the ground is repeated below the ground. Of course, that would be such a large container but get the largest one you can. I use old water troughs or large plastic horse water containers as large containers in garden centres are rather pricy.

I digress from this lovely climber though. He looks to tick a lot of boxes so if you have been looking for a small yellow climber, he will fit the bill.

Thursday 10th January

A species hybrid rose that suits my rather wild garden ‘Californica Plena’. She is a very tall shrub as you can see from the photo around 2m and she produces a small number of suckers. I usually dig these up and replant them in other wild areas or donate them to friends. You will end up with a small thicket if you leave her to do her thing.

She blooms just once fairly early in the season, starting in May but continuing for around a month. A mass of small pink buds appears which open into semi double blooms. The petals are deep lilac pink in the centre, paler on the edges and often with white streaks. Her coronet of yellow stamens attracts bees and other pollinators. Sweet light fragrance. These attractive medium size blooms sit in pleasing grey green foliage with reddish stems. Produces a large crop of large red hips in the autumn, much appreciated by the garden birds.

Slightly mysterious past with some confusion about being the original ‘Californica Plena’ introduced in 1894 by the Hungarian grower Geschwind or another one of his species hybrids ‘Theano’. Doubts also about her parent being Rosa Californica with some authorities considering her to be a Rosa nutkana hybrid. I will leave that argument for the taxonomists to decide. Sold widely as Californica Plena but you may also find her listed as Rosa californica ‘Plena’.

Very hardy, vigorous and disease free. Tolerant of shade, poor soil and drought conditions, she is a tough lady. She won’t suit a small garden but if you have a woodland or landscape garden, she is absolutely ideal. She manages to look attractive even when she has finished blooming which is rather rare for a rose.

Friday 11th January

 A David Austin rose today ‘Lichfield Angel’. Perhaps I should have kept this one back to post next Tuesday as the UK seems to need an angel at the moment but let’s think of roses rather than politics!

I haven’t planted any DA roses for some time, but I saw this rose last summer and admit to being a little tempted. Introduced in 2006, this is a pearl of a rose. Clusters of plump creamy apricot buds unfurl to large full petalled blooms. Beginning a soft subtle apricot before fading to a creamy white with warm honey petal bases giving a lovely glow to the bloom. I much prefer these creamy white roses to the rather hard glistening whites, a calmer more natural appearance that fits into any garden colour scheme.

Practically thornless she forms a nice rounded shaped bush with a maximum height of 1.5m. Good glossy foliage and excellent disease resistance was reported. Reliable repeat blooming throughout the summer and into early autumn. Fragrance? Well, this is a bit of a disappointment, to be honest. Just a light musk fragrance but rather elusive.

Her name comes from a remarkable medieval stone panel now known as the Lichfield Angel, discovered in 2003 when archaeological work was undertaken in the nave of Lichfield Cathedral. Believed to have formed part of the shrine of St Chad this panel retains traces of pigment, the body is red with white wings with red tips.

The Lichfield Angel panel

My husband and I spend a lot of time remodelling our garden and we recently demolished a sad shed on the outskirts of the garden. This has given us a large area in a neglected area. As my gardener (sounds grand but only four hours a week) said “I guess that will mean more roses then!”. ‘Lichfield Angel’ is a definite possibility.

Saturday 12 January

An interesting rose today bred by an amateur breeder the American Roy Shepherd, from unusual parents, the fabulous ‘Golden Wings’.

‘Soeur Thérèse’ a yellow Hybrid Tea is the seed parent, the pollen parent being an unnamed Rosa spinosissima var. altaica x ‘Ormiston Roy’ a Hybrid Spinosissima seedling. Unnamed seedlings are frequently used in rose breeders, these have good qualities but the second generation cross will be better. When Roy Shepherd wasn’t breeding roses he was writing, the classic 1954 ‘History of the Rose’ was an exceptional book in its time. This book has been surpassed by the increase in knowledge from recent research on the rose genome. Consequently, this book is relegated to dusty shelves and book collectors.

His rose ‘Golden Wings’ remains however a popular rose. Often the first rose in bloom and the last one before the winter frosts. She has a fragile beauty, but the species attributes have ensured she is a tough, vigorous and disease resistant rose. Tolerant of drought and poor soil, and very weatherproof as well. Thrives in heat and doesn’t mind shade. Long pointed buds open as lemon yellow cupped semi double blooms which flatten whilst fading to ivory white with lemon petal bases. A glowing corona of stamens in the centre. These are large blooms at least 12cm with a rich fruit like fragrance.

Not a small garden rose as she can easily reach 2m in height forming a tidy shrub. Rather Hybrid Tea like foliage but it is matt rather than shiny, this shows off the blooms very well. Hardy USDA zone 4b and warmer.

There is a similar American bred rose ‘White Wings’ but unrelated to ‘Golden Wings’. ‘White Wings’ is a pure white single rose with reddish brown stamens.

‘Golden Wings’ is a back of the border, landscape or woodland garden rose rather than a choice rose for the small garden. I can think of many untidy public areas that this rose would grace. Our local town tries hard with herbaceous plants on the roundabout islands, but I feel roses would be an easier solution. Imagine a traffic island filled with this rose or would she distract the passing drivers?

Sunday 13 January

A cold windy morning in Suffolk so I revisited the photographs taken in mid June at Mottisfont Abbey. Difficult to think it was so hot we were driven out of the rose garden to lie in the shade of the trees outside. Roses are sun and heat lovers but some, particularly, the older varieties, flag quickly with the blooms fading and falling before your eyes. This rose is an example so not easy to photograph. A pity as this is one of the loveliest of the Gallicas ‘Gloire de France’.

Rather renowned for fading quickly in bright sunshine she is a classic clear mid pink. The petal edges fade quickly to a lilac mauve leaving a brighter pink bloom centre. Huge globular blooms that flatten on opening. Muddled quartered swirl of petals gives charm to this rose. Exquisite heavy fragrance. Everything an old fashioned rose should be.

These superb blooms sit in foliage of a soft matt grey green. She forms a large arching shrub, around 1m high and spreads much wider. All good things, such as summer, come to an end and this rose has just a single tremendous burst of bloom before retiring for the remainder of the summer.  When planning your garden try to ensure that you have good repeat or continuous blooming roses around these single bloom period ones as they can look unexciting for the remainder of the summer. You prune them after blooming, that is the correct time for these, and then you are free to depart on holiday.

A tough vigorous rose, relatively disease resistant. Always a caveat with the older ones as they can be fine for years and then have a bad black spot attack.

Dates to around 1828 and is believed to have been discovered by Julien-Alexandre Hardy, head gardener of the Royal Luxembourg gardens. ‘Mme Hardy’ is probably his most well known rose from the two hundred or so that he introduced. If you find a rose with ‘du Luxembourg’ in the name it will be one of Hardy’s roses. There is a slight query as the Botanica’s Roses book cites an unnamed amateur rose breeder from Angers but I can’t trace any details of this. If you know a little more, please let me know.

Julien Alexandre Hardy

A superb rose for your old rose collection and very useful as she isn’t so high. Some nurseries recommend her for a container, but I feel she would struggle as she wants to spread sideways to achieve her full Glory of France.

Tuesday 15 January

When I am planning the roses to feature on this page, I have a rough scheme. I try to include a wide range of different classes, for example, a climber, a modern shrub where I try to have a small one if I have already had a large variety, an older pre-1900, a patio, an HT. Then I bumble around my photo files picking suitable candidates. Sometimes the name is appropriate to the day, ‘Champagne Moment’ for New Year’s Day for example. I admit to being rather depressed by the gloomy news today concerning tomorrow’s parliamentary vote, so I was searching for a rose to perk us up. Found one, result! Not just a beautiful rose but a fairly appropriate name for the day, ‘The Churchill Rose’.

Named for the 50th anniversary (2011) of Churchill College, Cambridge which is in turn a memorial to Sir Winston Churchill. I wonder what he would have thought about the current political debacle in which we find ourselves ensnared?

This is a rose bred by Peter Beales, so I doubt sadly whether he is available outside the UK. The Peter Beales website states that this is a perfect alternative to ‘Perdita’, a David Austin rose, that they no longer stock. Certainly, there are some similarities but this one doesn’t have the pink tones of ‘Perdita’. Instead ‘The Churchill Rose’ is a very subtle soft apricot. Semi double blooms with a striking lemon glowing centre. Repeat flowers and very free flowering as well. Superb fragrance completes the picture!

Healthy glossy foliage with attractive reddish edges to young foliage. Neat habit and quite small at 1.2m in height and width.

Such a pity this fabulous rose isn’t more widely available. If you come across him outside Britain do let me know.

Wednesday 16 January

Today a rose that originates in Australia rather than Europe or the US for a change. She is a real sport as well, sorry that’s a poor joke, the Floribunda ‘Burgundy Ice’. Her mutant parent, sports are natural mutations occurring on a parent bush, is ‘Brilliant Pink Iceberg’ (1995). In turn, she was a sport of ‘Pink Iceberg’ (1995), these last two were also found in Australia. ‘Pink Iceberg’ as her name suggests is a sport of the well known ‘Iceberg’ (1958).

‘Burgundy Ice’ was discovered in 1998 and introduced somewhat later in 2003. The lineage seems to have an unstable genome where environmental pressure, for example, drought, extreme heat or cold, tweaks the genetic switches for petal colour. You can see in this photograph, in Peter Beales garden in Norfolk, one of the blooms has experienced a ‘tweak’ resulting in a bi-coloured bloom. There was evidence of others in the bed, some almost pure white others burgundy with a streak or two. The white blooms in the background are another variety.

Abundant clusters of elegant purple pointed buds appear in flushes throughout the season. Opening to these large deep coloured blooms, the velvety petals have somewhat paler backs which accentuate the strong wine purple hue. Opens to show a coronet of dark burgundy stamens although the bi coloured rose here shows golden stamens. She has a light fragrance with some reports of nothing or strong, perhaps she needs sun and heat to release the scent.

Not a large rose at a maximum height of 90cm and a little wider. Tidy domed shape with good glossy foliage and good disease resistance. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b. I have seen her as an informal hedge and also in large containers. Despite her strong colour she seems to me to have a fragile charm.

Available worldwide under both names ‘Burgundy Ice’ and ‘Burgundy Iceberg’. I rather like her propensity to revert down the generations to the glistening white ‘Iceberg’ and I am tempted to smuggle her past my husband into the garden. Appropriate for this morning in Britain, a split of colour.

Thursday 17 January

When I was at school teaching by rote occurred in almost every class. We chanted multiplication tables, and small ditties about shutting doors and hanging up coats. In the playground, we played skipping games to the accompaniment of an appropriate rhyme. We learnt poetry, realms of it, by heart. This learning system is deeply unfashionable today although I blessed it when I had to learn chemical equations and biochemical processes. One of the poems I learnt as a ten year old, too young to understand the veiled meaning, was Tennyson’s Lady of Shalott. Today we have the David Austin rose Lady of Shalott named for the tragic heroine.

An evocative name and highly applicable to English roses. Named to commemorate the two hundredth anniversary of the birth, in 2009, of Alfred, Lord Tennyson.

If I remember correctly the Lady of Shalott was very beautiful and her rose is certainly that. Vibrant orange red buds open to a loose bowl shaped bloom of loosely arranged orangey pink petals. The outer petals are a salmon pink giving a nice contrast to the paler lemon lustrous centre. She is a rose of considerable colour variation. On the DA website, she is mostly orange pink, but other growers have photos of roses with tones of apricot pinks, soft pink, lemon pink and creamy pink.

Fragrance? Reported to be excellent but some variable reports on this. The DA website has a lyrical Tea fragrance with hints of spiced apple and clove. I will leave that to you to decide.

Reliably repeat blooms through the summer. Foliage is typical DA medium size glossy leaves. Neat bushy habit and reaches around 1.10m high. Said to have good disease resistance but I find the DAs a little hit and miss on this. In some places they are healthy and other growers report heavy black spot infection.

Tends to ‘ball’ in wet weather and she is a bit of a head hanger sadly.

Widely available of course. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b (that’s the default for all roses really).

Is she one of your favourites?

Friday 18th January

A Friday Favourite this morning and a rose that I have not seen before. A French rose from the prolific nursery of Meilland, introduced in 2006, the Floribunda ‘Astronomia’. A rose that has impressed the rose world as she has a slew of European awards and medals.

She has a few aliases’ ‘The Charlatan’ being her exhibition name and I believe she is sold in the US as this. A curious name choice but Meilland also have ‘The Imposter’ so a bit of a theme there. ‘Sweet Pretty’ and ‘Pink Sakurina’ are also listed with MEIguimov as the ICRA name. The seed parent is the lovely ‘Bonica’.

I love single roses and this one is a stunner. Sprays of elegant pink tipped rosebuds are freely produced continuously throughout the summer.  Opening to medium size single blooms of pale pink with a large glorious crown of red stamens. The petals have a tissue like quality with faint darker pink streaks and pale towards the base. Fading to white before a clean drop. Elusive on the fragrance front, some growers reporting a light fragrance and others no fragrance. She may well like a lot of warmth to release fragrance perhaps.

Size reports vary as well, again this will be climate related. She seems to be a ‘large’ 90cm as recommended as a pillar rose or a short climber. Very disease resistant but a few mentions of a touch of late black spot.

Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b. Available in Europe and the States. I cannot, alas, find a stockist in Britain although she appears on the RHS list and has been photographed in a few British gardens. If you know of a stockist do let me know. Does anyone grow her?

Saturday 19th January

I am not too great a fan of red roses, I prefer almost any other colour, but I know a lot of you love red ones, so today’s rose is for you. A rather old fashioned Hybrid Tea, she was introduced in 1963 so she has survived a lot of changes in fashion. German bred from the Tantau nursery this is ‘Fragrant Cloud’. A rose of memories for me as my mother grew this rose in two of our family homes. To be honest I think everyone grew this rose as it was tremendously popular and you could buy it in Woolworths.

Small clusters of typical long elegant buds open to these spectacular blooms, they can be 12cm in diameter. Very full petalled with the characteristic high centre of the Hybrid Teas. Rather orange coral hue when young and matures to a darker red with rather purple touches. With the name ‘Fragrant Cloud’ you can guess the fragrance is excellent, spicy and fruity. Repeat blooms all summer.

A vigorous grower with large glossy leaves with a hint of bronze on the young leaves. She can reach 1.5m in height but she is narrow in habit. The fashion in the sixties was for bedding roses so tall and narrow was popular. Disease resistance? Well pretty poor to be honest, susceptible to both black spot and mildew. A lot of these mid-century Hybrid Teas had poor disease resistance. It was expected then if you grew roses then you had to spray them. Now good disease resistance is as important as good colour and bloom shape, the ability to flower freely and excellent fragrance.

Widely available. Hardy USDA zone 7b-10b. Is she a well loved favourite of yours? Or do you share my red rose allergy?

20th January

Rose names are generally a giveaway. ‘Scent from Heaven’ and ‘Fragrant Cloud’ are deliciously scented. ‘Iceberg’ is a glistening icy white. ‘Amber Flower Carpet’ is well she is an amber coloured carpet. Sometimes the name seems to be not so appropriate. Today we have just such a rose with an ambiguous name ‘Little Rambler’. Described as a miniature rambler, or a miniature climber or by some authorities as a patio rambler. Don’t be misled by these terms and plant her in a corner of your small town patio. The only thing ‘little’ about this rose are the blooms and the foliage. She can easily reach 2.5 high and reports of 3.5m with a similar spread.

A product of the prolific amateur rose breeder Christopher Warner, the Persica Hybrids such as ‘For your Eyes Only’ are just one of his one hundred and sixty four roses. He began with an aim to breed very disease resistant climbers using ‘Rosa sinowilsonii ‘ x ‘Marjorie Fair’. Using seedlings from this lineage he developed miniature ramblers/climbers.  

A class of very healthy and hardy roses with excellent blooms. Perfect for gardeners who prefer not to use fungicide. ‘Little Rambler’ produces sprays of mini pink tipped buds. Initially, a mid pink on opening these semi double blooms fade gracefully to pale pink and white. The petals are small and have a pleasing loose muddled arrangement. Eyecatching bright yellow stamen corona. Excellent fragrance which drifts in the air. Repeat blooms in flushes but these flushes are so close she really is almost continuously in bloom through the summer. She has ‘Cecile Brunner’ in her lineage so this continuous blooming may well come from the lovely Cecile.

Widely available but you may find her under the name ‘Baby Rambler’. USDA zone 5b and warmer.

This is a rose well worth considering if you have a bit of space. The stems are very pliable so easily bent into position, easily trained would fit her description! Of course, you can prune her to keep her within bounds in a small garden. If you grow her please comment.

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Tuesday 22nd January

A blast from the past today with a rose that I remember well as a great friend grew it a fair few years ago. A David Austin rose was introduced in 1984 but no longer in their catalogue, ‘Belle Story’.

Described as a rather angular shrub ‘Belle Story’ has bright pink buds which open to large mid pink loosely petalled semi double blooms with a beautiful large stamen crown. Not a typical David Austin rose or at least not what we think of when thinking of the later DA roses.  Good fragrance. Repeat blooming seems a bit dubious , some authorities reporting just a single flush with some later blooms. Others report that she repeat blooms well. Perhaps she is a picky lady when it comes to soil, and climate..

Interesting breeding in that these older DA have a named lineage whereas the later ones just give unnamed seedling for the seed and pollen parent. Seed parent was a ‘Chaucer’ (DA) x ‘Parade’ a modern climber seedling. Pollen parent ‘The Prioress’ (DA) x ‘Iceberg’ seedling.

Some reports that ‘Belle Story’ wasn’t too keen on cold weather. Also, not great on the disease resistance front with some susceptibility to rust and mildew. I assume this is why she has been removed from the DA catalogue. She doesn’t appear to be stocked by anyone in the UK but clearly, she is much loved in Australia and the US also. Predicted height is 1.20m but I bet she is taller in the heat!

A little conundrum over her name. According to David Austin’s English Roses (1993) Belle Story was one of the first of three nursing sisters to serve in the Royal Navy in 1884. Before this date all the nurses were male. I thought I would dig around a little more for information on Belle Story. There is a fair amount on the web about these early nurses in what became Queen Alexandra’s Royal Naval Nursing Service in 1902 but Belle Story is absent from the lists of nursing sisters. The National Archive list is muddled but a researcher has sorted all the records but no Belle. I searched Ancestry for both Belle, Bella, Isabelle and Isabella as a first and a second name. No luck there either. I am sure that David Austin would have researched this lady. A mystery but if you have the time and inclination to search somewhat more thoroughly than myself, I would be interested to hear what you find. I do sometimes have to remind myself that it’s the rose I am writing about not the namesake!

I wonder if anyone still grows ‘Belle Story’? Do let me know and post your comments and photos.

Wednesday 23 January

Today’s rose  is a beautiful Tea ‘Madame de Watteville’ bred by the French grower Jean-Batiste André Guillot and introduced in 1883.

She produces large elegant blooms of lemon petals edged in pink on long stems. These are said to look like tulips when first opening, that must be a very special sight. Very fragrant as are all Tea roses. Blooms throughout the summer and into autumn. A very thorny lady with dense dark foliage. Height around 1m. A sun lover and she is rather more tender than most of the Teas, so needs winter protection. Good for a container as she could luxuriate outside in the summer sun and be wheeled into a conservatory for the winter.

Named for a remarkable Swiss lady Katharina von Wattenwyl (1645-1714) described as the Sun King’s spy. Strong willed and capable, following an argument with a lady in the French court Katharina challenged her to a midnight duel on horseback. Highly unconventional she shocked Swiss society and her family. Forcibly married to Abraham Le Clerc who died early in the marriage. Her second marriage was to a court clerk in Bern and she began to spy for the French Ambassador to Switzerland. Caught with secret messages she was imprisoned and condemned to death. Her family intervened so the sentence was reduced to exile to Valangin Castle where she wrote her memoirs for Louis XIV.

My reason for posting today’s rose? I have a friend Celeste who is a descendant of Katharina von Wattenwyl and has inherited many of the strong willed unconventional traits of Katharina! She would very much like to grow ‘Madame de Watteville’, but we can’t find anyone who stocks her in the UK. Peter Beales did stock her, they had an excellent collection of Tea roses but no longer. If anyone knows of a nursery that stocks, her or someone who grows her and would donate some cuttings??

Thursday 24 January

I have a spreadsheet of all the posts from this page to track which rose was posted and on what date. The photos are all filed accordingly but I often find a photo that slips into the posted file when it should have remained in the not yet posted file. Today’s rose is a victim of my poor filing. A Harkness shrub rose introduced in 1978, ‘Marjorie Fair’. Named for a good friend of Jack Harkness.

Her seed parent is the white Hybrid Musk ‘Ballerina’ (featured on 12th August) and her pollen parent is a small dark mauve Polyantha ‘Baby Faurax’. Think of the superb white ‘Ballerina’ and then imagine her as deep cerise reddish pink and you have ‘Marjorie Fair’.

Forms a slightly smaller shrub than Ballerina, around 1.2m in height and rather narrower approximately 90cm. Small dense light green glossy leaved foliage sets off her large clusters of bloom. These clusters can be large indeed, dozens of mini bright pink buds appear. Popping open to small five petalled blooms of deep cerise pink verging on crimson with strongly contrasting white petal bases. Nice little accent of a yellow stamen crown in the middle. These fragile little blooms just last and last. While they are blooming their hearts out another stem is popping out another mega cluster. Described as flowering ‘tirelessly’ which is pretty accurate. However, one cannot have it all, her fragrance is well pretty poor, to be honest.

Her strong colour means she needs careful placing in your garden unless you are fond of strong contrasts. Pick a fragrant neighbour for her and pretend she has a great scent. Very disease resistant and hardy USDA zone 5b and warmer. Gained an RHS (Royal Horticultural Society UK) Award of Garden Merit (AGM) in 2001 in recognition of her excellent garden attributes. Very widely available across the world.

An easy rose to grow and suitable for those who prefer not to use fungicides. Makes a good informal hedge, great in a border and as a landscape rose. I have seen her in neat roadside plantings in The Netherlands where she is a distinct improvement on the UK litter bedecked unkempt grass. Find a space for her and you won’t be disappointed.

Friday 25th January

Friday Favourite and today this climbing rose is one of my favourites, the fabulous Noisette ‘Madame Alfred Carrière’. I have a fair few plants as she is a dream to root from cuttings. The original grows beside my front door where she is a little too vigorous and occasionally attacks the postman. I have another in the hedge beside my indoor riding arena, several by the stables and a lot more donated to friends.

Originated in France in 1879 from the nursery of Joseph Schwartz. ‘Madame Alfred Carrière’ along with his ‘Reine Victoria’ are two of his most well known roses. Joseph’s wife Marie-Louise was also involved in rose breeding but that’s a tale outside of this rose. Alfred Carrière was the editor of the prestigious journal ‘Revue Horticole’ and a great rose lover. I have been unable to discover whether Alfred purchased the naming rights or if Joseph himself named the rose for Alfred’s wife. Was Alfred’s wife as beautiful as her rose?

This rose blooms continuously all year, not a great deal of bloom in the winter but there are always at least three or four blooms and more buds coming along. Very long elegant buds on long stems as well, deep cream with pink touches. They unfurl into large full blooms of delicate shell pink which fade to white. They remind me of swansdown powder puffs. Good for cutting and her strong fragrance will fill your house.

Practically evergreen soft green foliage but she can suffer from mildew at times, so you need to keep an eye on her in the summer. Tolerant of shade and will also grow happily on a north wall.  She will grow as a large shrub as she has very strong stems. As a climber, she can happily reach 5m but is rather shorter when grown as a shrub. Said to dislike pruning but I prune her fairly hard otherwise she would take over the entire house. Leave a window open for several days and she will have poked several stems into the room!

This is a rose that I would not be without really. I look at her from my kitchen window, her fragrance drifts through open windows and she is the first rose I see as I come down our drive. I forgive her slight mildew problem as she has so many good attributes. If you grow her you won’t be disappointed.

Saturday 26th January

I remember attending dull post grad faculty social events, it was felt someone from the department really should be there and no one else was keen. Stifling a yawn, I listened whilst an overseas student with not such great English enthusiastically explained his research into depressive symbolism in 19th century English poetry. The symbolism was over my head, but I had at least heard of his primary subject John Clare.

Today’s rose is named for that rather troubled poet or rather for The John Clare Society, formed to promote a better understanding of his poetry. This pretty rose was said at the time of introduction, 1994, to be one of the most floriferous of the David Austin roses. No longer in their current British catalogue but appears in the US version. Unable to find a British stockist but several in Europe and the Antipodeans.

Long elegant feathery buds open to full petalled deep raspberry pink cup shaped blooms. Repeat blooming but a little unreliable in cooler weather. Fragrance is unusually not the signature strong English rose of David Austin. Light and ethereal, vanishingly light really. This attribute together with often poor repeat blooming may have caused his removal from the catalogue. Still popular in warmer climes so he appreciates better weather than British summers or perhaps I should say our traditional summers as we seem to have been enjoying hot dry continental summers for a few years now.

Semi glossy foliage which forms an attractive arching shrub. Maximum height prediction is 90-150cm with similar width. I guess he is larger in warmer climates.

John Clare frequently mentions roses in his poetry. An extract from the poem entitled ‘Roses’ –

‘Making thyself a living rose

In blossom all the year.

It is a sweet and favorite flower

To grace a maidens brow’

An appealing rose and always sad when they fade from popularity.

Sunday 27 January

Norfolk winters are not mild, suffering from a lazy east wind. Why lazy? It doesn’t go around you but straight through you! Coupled with a sharp frost this combination can be the death of slightly tender plants. Tea roses are not usually renowned for their hardiness, USDA zone 7 with a low of 0° C is fine but lower than that and you may lose the plant. Often these roses are grown in containers so they can enjoy the summer before being wheeled into the conservatory for the winter. Today’s rose is a rather hardy lady as I photographed her growing in an outside bed at Peter Beales Norfolk nursery in September, the fabulous ‘Bon Silène’.

Dating from 1834 there is a slight debate over her breeder. A lot of authorities have her as a product of Alexander Hardy, as an incorrect attribution in 1882 gave Hardy as the breeder. It is now believed the breeder was Modeste Guérin from Angers, as there are earlier references to him from 1836. Checking primary sources rather than using secondary ones is drummed into science students but other disciplines are not so fussy hence the errors that litter books and the modern press.

‘Bon Silène’ was one of the first Tea roses to be bred outside China. The characteristic long elegant Tea buds unfurl into large double dark pink blooms with a rather muddled petal arrangement, again a Tea trait. As she matures the petals reflex and the colour fades to a mid pink often with these pale streaks. Intense luxurious ‘Tea’ fragrance. She produces a lot of bloom almost continuously through the summer.

Not a small lady, she can reach 2.5m. Rather small twiggy stems but she is a vigorous grower. Crimson hued leaves when young turning mid green as they mature. Very resistant to blackspot but there are a few reports of her suffering from mildew so you may just have to watch her carefully for this. If you zap mildew the moment you see it all will be well. Leave it and within a few days the leaves will be grey and dying.

A rose who doesn’t mind neglect. She has been found happily growing in abandoned gardens and cemeteries in the US, she clearly didn’t suffer any mildew attacks here. She does like the sun though and would appreciate a sheltered spot. In the Peter Beales garden she looked very happy and healthy although this is a rather open windswept garden. Her hardiness rating is given as USDA zone 5b-10b

This is a superb rose and certainly well worth considering. She has a delicate graceful appearance which is very eye catching.

There is no record of the namesake of this rose the good Silène. Was she a wife, sister, child, or aunt of Modeste Guérin? A good customer maybe or perhaps one he wished to flatter? Lost in the mists of time but her lovely namesake rose survives. I am interested to see who grows her and where you live. Do please comment and post any photos if you have them.

Tuesday 29th January

Roses from the French nursery of Delbard are renowned for exceptional fragrance and good disease resistance. Today we have their 2004 Hybrid Tea ‘Soeur Emmanuelle’. Named for Sister Emmanuelle a nun with French and Belgian parentage. She lived and worked amongst the rubbish collectors, the poorest of poor people, in Cairo for twenty two years. On her return to France in 1993 she become a popular guest on TV talk shows and radio programmes.

Clusters of carmine pink buds unscroll into large full petalled cupped blooms. ‘Soeur Emmanuelle’ is a pleasing mid pink with paler pink inner petals. She fades to a soft lilac as she ages. Rich spicy fragrance likened by some to aniseed and others as lavender. You will have to decide when you breathe her perfume! Reliable repeat blooms through the summer into autumn.

Not too large around 1m high and narrow at 60cm wide. In warmer climes, though she can be much larger. Rather large leathery foliage characteristic of Hybrid Tea roses. A few reports from Australia that she does suffer a touch of black spot. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b.

A rose of quite a few names. She was introduced into the US as ‘Sister Emmanuelle’ in 2018. Other aliases are ‘Chant Rose Misato’, (Japan?), Dieter Muller in Northern Europe, and Towering Rose Magic. The ICRA appellation is DELamo if you need to check. Widely available.

A classic rose to grace your garden.

Wednesday 30 January

I have a fondness for old fashioned Christian names, preferring ‘Colette’ for example over ‘Chelsea’. Of course, these names reappear and disappear as fashions change. Today’s rose has a delightful name ‘Clotilde Soupert’.

Originating from the Luxembourg nursery of Soupert & Notting. now that sounds very avant-garde, a rather upmarket and trendy interior designer perhaps??? Pierre Notting became friends with Jean Soupert around 1855 and they set up their rose nursery together. Jean married Pierre’s sister Anne Marie in 1857 so Soupert & Notting became a real family business. They produced two hundred and thirty one roses, no mean feat! A plethora of Madame’s, Grand Dukes, Duchesses and Princesses appear in their list but sadly a fair number of these have slipped into oblivion. Perhaps their most well known rose today is the Centifolia, ‘Tour de Malakoff’.

The fair ‘Clotilde Soupert’ dates from 1888, she is classed as a Polyantha. Seed parent ‘Mignonette’ is a Rosa polyantha x China rose with a Tea rose ‘Madame Damaizin’. These small Polyanthas were enormously popular in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries but over time these have drifted out of favour.

Plump spherical white, with a hint of pink, buds are produced in large clusters. Opening to very full petalled delicate blooms, they have a fragile pompom appearance. The petals are white with pink backs but so translucent that the bloom looks pink. She fades to white but retains the pink inner petals. Very free flowering almost continuous with a strong sweet fragrance.


A small rose, almost miniature at a height of 80cm with a narrower spread. Practically thornless with dark green foliage. She sounds heavenly but there is a large ‘but’ certainly for those in cooler damper climates.


She doesn’t like damp weather her blooms ‘ball’ very easily. Susceptible to mildew and in cool weather she doesn’t bloom so freely. One can see how she fell out of favour in Northern Europe. Grow her in dry hot climates, this photo was taken in Florida, she is a delight flowering all year. In the chilly damper countries, she is sometimes grown as a rather large house plant. These little Polyanthas are the precursor of today’s Patio and Miniature roses.


I can’t find a British stockist but some French nurseries hold stocks. Freely available in the southern states of the US. Not sure about Australia and New Zealand, if you grow her there please comment.

A very pretty rose, reminding one of the hot summer days.

Thursday 31 January

Tastes in roses change over time, the Victorians were fond of roses and other plants that cause us to pull a face. Lovers of innovation and the ‘new’ they were enamoured with the ‘Moss’ roses. These are Centifolias that underwent a mutation causing the flower sepals to develop a moss like texture with a strong balsam fragrance. Initially appearing around the 1720s most of the Moss roses in catalogues today date from that Victorian period. Today’s rose was introduced in 1852 from the fruitful nursery of Laffay in France and is reputed to be one of the finest – ‘Gloire des Mousseux’.

Very well mossed buds said to be the origin of the name, open to large full blooms of a clear pink. Charming muddled central small petals hold their colour as the outer silky petals fade to pale pink. Reflexing and flattening as they mature, very long lasting as well. A classic French rose in appearance. Sweet and strong fragrance, if you hold the bloom to your nose your fingers will touch the moss releasing an extra spicy note. I love this combination. Usually, large clusters but the odd single bloom does appear. Mainly blooms in a glorious flush in June but sometimes she obliges later in the season, particularly in hot summers.

One of the largest Moss roses at 1.5m but can often reach 2m. The foliage is abundant, fresh soft green which frames the superb blooms well. Good disease resistance. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b. Available worldwide.

A little dispute that ‘Gloire des Mousseux’ may be identical to a rose sold as ‘Mme. Louis Léveque’. In the days of poor record keeping combined with the random breeding techniques in the nineteenth century one does find roses that are remarkably similar, practically identical. Either that or the same rose with several names.

An excellent rose for a classic rose garden if you have a bit of space for her and you remain at home in June or whenever the main rose blooming season is for you. Apologies that I write from a British seasonal perspective. I sit in a slightly chilly office this morning in Suffolk looking out at the hoar frost on the trees whilst Australia melts in extreme heat.

If any grows this rose and/or ‘Mme. Louis Léveque’ perhaps you could post some photographs so we could do a little detective work.

The ravishing ‘Lady Waterlow’

I have a long curving brick wall dividing the farmyard from the garden. On the garden side, south facing, there are a number of climbers. The bare north side is maybe not the best aspect but last winter I planted several climbers along it. They seem content enough despite the long dry spell.

‘Lady Waterlow’, a Tea Noisette from Nabbonand, and introduced in 1902. The Nabbonand family were prolific breeders of both Tea and Tea Noisettes, many now lost to cultivation. Most were named to flatter their wealthy customers, many English aristocrats visited the nursery on their journey to the fashionable Côte d’Azur. Perhaps there may have been some monetary exchange for a rose naming. One of the last Tea Noisettes before the fashion turned to the Hybrid Multiflora and Wichuranas that dominate the climbing roses in current cultivation.

‘Lady Waterlow’, described by Charles Quest-Ritson as a ravishing rose, is considered one of the best roses produced by Nabbonand. Still very popular, and widely found in nursery catalogues. Long dark pink buds pale as they open to a large loose bloom with pale pink petals edged with a flush pink on the petal edge and a hint of yellow on the base. Quite variable in colour though, a legacy of her Tea heritage, ‘Madame Falcot’ dominates her pedigree. These elegant blooms appear either singly or in clusters, and have a delicious fragrance. Early to bloom, and then continues throughout the summer so seldom without bloom. Enjoys hot weather so this summer has made her a happy rose.

Prickly stems which are on the stiff side, not so easy to train. Large leaves which so far have not shown any disease as she is reputed to suffer from black spot. In the UK ‘Lady Waterlow’ will reach around 2m but is much larger in warmer climates. We slip towards a warmer climate so she may gain in size as global warming increases. USDA zones 6b and warmer.

Just a small note about climbers. It is tempting to plant climbers and leave them alone, much as you would do with a shrub rose. However, you need to be tweaking those stems into a good fan shape from day one. They often grow in the wrong direction, out away from the wall, but can be gently coaxed by judicious ties. If you bend or pull them too hard the stem may snap, we have all done this!  I often loosely knot a length cut from a pair of old tights around the stem and tie it to the wall wire, just a gentle bend at first. As the stem grows you can shorten the tie. It is this first season that’s important for the eventual shape. You will find several stems grow outwards or that you have too many candidates. I let these grow but use them for cuttings. One must be a bit ruthless with climbers!

Portrait of Lady Waterlow
Edward R. Hughes

Lady Waterlow was named for an American heiress, Margaret Hamilton (1849), who married Sir Sydney Hedley Waterlow (1822-1906) after a whirlwind ten day romance. She was thirty three and Sydney, a widower with eight children, was sixty. Sydney began his career working in the family printing business Waterlow and Sons. He moved into politics and philanthropic works. Principally remembered today for giving Waterlow Park in Highgate to the public as “a garden for the gardenless” in 1889. Lady Waterlow supported her husband in his charitable work and continued to do so after his death in 1906. A gracious lady much like her rose.

Comments and questions are welcome as always.

Originally posted on the 7th August 2022 on my Facebook blog Rose of the Day

‘Arethusa’- the waterer

We are still in the grip of a fierce drought here in East Suffolk. The lawn is brown and crisped to death, and I walk miles watering the roses. This morning’s rose ‘Arethusa’ was chosen in the hope this would stimulate some rain. Arethusa, one of the Greek Nereids, left her home in Arcadia, and appeared as a freshwater fountain in Sicily.

Bred by William Paul, introduced in 1903 ‘Arethusa’ is a late addition to the China group. A sensation at the time of her introduction due to the then unusual orange tints. We have so many roses now with this colouration that it can be unremarkable, but this rose remains eye catching. The orange colour appears in the bud, fading through apricot pink as the bloom opens. A soft pink at first before paling to white, the heat and sun at the beginning of the week bleached the blooms all too fast. The petals reflex and scroll, forming charming quills of pale pink. The fragrance is Tea like but as with a lot of the Chinas, it is somewhat elusive. Some days a noticeable perfume from a distance, but the next time you visit and plunge your nose into the bloom it will have vanished. Repeat blooms reliably.

In a normal season, this is a healthy rose but the sharp eyed amongst will notice a dusting of powdery mildew, (Podosphaera pannosa). This is a fungal infection that enjoys dry soil conditions, heat, and high humidity. Typically, climbers are the first to be infected as they experience dry soil when planted against a wall. This infection can rapidly defoliate a rose, and severe infections over a few years will stunt growth to the point of death. Fast moving as well, you need to be vigilant to spot the first signs on the ends of the upper stems. Powdery mildew starts at the top of the bush/climber and moves downwards, Black Spot is the other way – starts at the bottom and moves upwards. I sprayed the infected roses early in the season in May, but the dry weather continued, and more roses had a touch or two. I tried a different approach by watering the infected roses copiously, and flooding the bed, three times a week. This has worked, there are still minor infections but where the new growth has appeared it is free of mildew. And there is a lot of new growth from the heat, and watering. Whether this approach will work each year I do not know but it is worth trying. I have a preventative strategy with fungicides using them in the winter rather than a curative one in the summer. Summer spraying, curative, is a less effective use of fungicide as well. Also, this means a head torch in the dark at midnight to avoid any day flying insects, but you will hit several moths with the spray. Given that all insect numbers are falling responsible gardeners should take care.

Back to the lovely ‘Arethusa’. Not too large, around 1m in height and breadth. Possible in a large container but happier in the ground.  Widely available. USDA zone 7b-10b. Requires little pruning. If you deadhead, then she repeats very quickly. Thoughts and comments are welcome as always.

First posted in the very dry summer of 2022, 24th July, on my Facebook blog Rose of the Day.

The sprawling ‘Raubritter’

Living in the flat Suffolk countryside I yearn for a hillside garden with terraces and banks. One always wishes for the impossible! Today’s rose ‘Raubritter’ is one to grow falling down a bank or over the side of a terrace.

Bred in Germany in 1936 by Wilhelm Kordes, the pink hybrid Macrantha shrub ‘Daisy Hill’ provided the seed with the vigorous red hybrid Wichurana rambler ‘Solarium’ donating the pollen. ‘Raubritter’ is a procumbent rose, with long snaking stems. I planted her in a bed to grow as a shrub, but those long stems are proving to be a trip hazard on the nearby path. I gave her a small frame, but she is having none of it. Reputedly she will scramble up a tree or hedge up to around 3m.

Small pointed rose buds appear in large clusters in early June opening to the most astonishing bloom. The profusion of buds open to silvery pink globes each with a small opening at the top, very un-rose like. The small opening gradually widens until a beautiful dusky pink peony like bloom emerges. Just so beautiful, one could look at them all day. Fragile and delicate but remarkably weatherproof and long lasting. A fresh sweet fragrance drifts from these superb blooms. Just one magnificent flush but you do get a wealth of these attractive blooms for an extended period.

A tendency for mildew infection is reported in the literature but mine has been extremely healthy in a dry bed. Otherwise, she is very vigorous with slender prickly stems and narrow wrinkled foliage. Hardy USDA zone 6b-9b. Reputed to be very frost resistant. American Rose Society grading 8.1 (A solid to very good rose. Its good features easily outweigh any problems. Well above average).

This dainty ethereal rose has an entirely inappropriate name. A Raubritter was a feudal robber baron or knight imposing unfair taxes and demands on his subjects. I can think of a few rampaging thorn ridden ramblers for whom the name Raubritter would be extremely apt but not this pretty rose.

The modern healthy continuous flowering ground cover roses may have overtaken her, but I still think ‘Raubritter’ is well worth growing. Mine is just in the wrong place to show her best. In the autumn she is to move to a sloping bank where she can fall over the retaining wall. If you are lucky enough to visit Mottisfont you will find ‘Raubritter’ adorning the small central ornamental pool, a wonderful sight.

Originally posted on my Facebook blog Rose of the Day on 2nd July 2022

‘Yolande d’Aragon’

Today’s rose is one that does not sit neatly into a ‘class’, described as a hybrid Gallica, Portland, or Hybrid Perpetual. A genetic study does show she is closer to the Gallicas than the Portlands. To be honest, a lot of the old garden roses are ‘mongrels’ with attributes from their parents who in turn were a bit of a mixture. Whatever her antecedent ‘Yolande d’Aragon’ is a glorious rose.

Dating from 1843, introduced by Jean-Pierre Vibert, and is reputed to be a seedling of the Damask Perpetual ‘Belle de Trianon. Yolande produces clusters of dark pink buds dressed in feathery sepals. Large, cupped blooms of deep pink with pale backs. Stuffed with petals in a rosette swirl. Breathtakingly strong old rose fragrance, you must keep returning for another deep inhale. One big summer flush followed by intermittent blooms or even a second flush. Mine is a young rose but last summer she had a lot of late bloom.

Will reach around 1.5m tall with a width of 1m. She is of the era of strongly disease resistant roses but here she had shown some black spot this summer. It has been a weird season though. A very dry mild winter and equally dry spring often with strong cold winds with the odd hot sunny day thrown into the mix. The roses did not know whether to grow or quietly sleep, producing a lot of stressed small foliage. Even the Pemberton Hybrid Musks suffered with the early foliage succumbing to fungal infection. The flush of foliage following rain was and remains healthy so perhaps Yolande’s spot is the result of the weather rather than inherent disease propensity.

A popular rose and widely available. Graded an 8.5 from the American Rose Society – a very good to excellent rose, one recommended without hesitation. Hardy USDA zones 4b-9b.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6b/Marriage_of_Yolande_of_Aragon.jpg

Depiction of the marriage of Louis II of Anjou and Yolande of Aragon from Froissart’s Chronicles 1470. (http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/ILLUMIN.ASP?Size=mid&IllID=22147)

Yolande d’Aragon (1379-1442) played a significant role in the complex ‘Game of Thrones’ in both Spain and France. Born a princess of the small Spanish state of Aragon, her parents arranged her marriage in 1400 to end a feud between the Aragon and Anjou families. Yolande initially resisted this marriage to Louis II, Dule of Anjou. However, it turned out to be a long successful marriage with five children. Yolande became a committed supporter of the French royal family in the last years of the Hundred Year War. Her involvement deepened when her daughter Marie of Anjou married Charles the youngest son of the mad Charles VI.

Charles became heir to the French throne when his eldest brother John died. Following the death of Charles VI, the infant Henry VI of England was proclaimed King of France. Yolande encouraged Charles to fight for his throne. She supported Joan of Arc’s ambition to lead the French army in the successful battle against the English, so Charles became King of France. Yolande’s great diplomatic skill continued to be employed in quelling feuds and squabbles between the French aristocratic families. Not the atypical interfering mother-in-law I think. Certainly, a lady who deserves a rose that is a little out of the ordinary.

I forgive ‘Yolande d’Aragon’ for her few spots this season as the blooms and fragrance are quite special. In her second summer here, she has grown vigorously despite being in a slightly shady position. Do you grow her? How is her disease resistance with you? Comments are welcome as always.

First posted on my Facebook blog Rose of the Day on 27th June 2023

‘Thérèse Bugnet’

Today a jump from the heat loving Tea Roses to a cold hardy rose – the Hybrid Rugosa ‘Thérèse Bugnet’.

A rose that you could walk past when she is not in bloom thinking from the foliage that this is a shrub of another species. Long narrow matt leaves that are not typical of any other Hybrid Rugosa that I have seen. In the autumn the tall stems turn an attractive red.

The photograph shows a bloom just a little bit before its best. These sizeable blooms appear in clusters, with large wavy petals which unfold to a saucer shape. Dark pink initially before fading to a softer tone with those charming golden stamens. Typical sweet but sharp clove Rugosa fragrance that ‘lifts’, carrying in the air around the shrub. Repeat blooms from summer into autumn. Orange hips follow but I find not so many as expected.

A tall shrub, 1.5-2m which responds to pegging down, a small amount of work which gives more bloom. Not really thorn free but just a few. Like most hybrid Rugosas she dislikes being pruned. Resistant to blackspot. Suckers when grown on her own roots. The one kicker about this rose is the tendency for dieback, particularly when it occurs in the tallest and best stems. Shade tolerant though. Exceptional cold hardiness, USDA zone 3-9b, recommended for North Sweden. Widely available.

A straightforward easy rose to grow. Just the little niggle with dieback

This cold hardiness attribute combined with her name shouldn’t be too much of a surprise. Bred by one of the most extraordinary rose breeders I have ever come across, Georges Bugnet, (for those of you worried re the pronunciation it’s boon-yay). If there isn’t yet a book on Georges Bugnet then there should be. One of the major French writers of Western Canada, he published four novels, the best known being ‘The Forest’. Also, numerous essays, short stories, and poetry. Born in France in 1879, and educated at the Sorbonne, Georges immigrated to Canada with his wife Julia and lived in a homestead close to Edmonton in Alberta. Although not trained as a botanist he had a great interest in plants and began to breed one that could survive the harsh Alberta climate. Taking seeds from Russian plants he produced the Lagoda pine tree. He experimented with native Russian roses and the native Canadian species producing ‘Thérèse Bugnet’, in 1941, named for his sister. He continued to breed roses for fun producing 16 hybrid Rugosas, and giving the plants away to nurseries to propagate and sell. With nine children he was very interested in education and was very involved in the local schools and their education programmes. Georges had a long life, dying at the grand age of 101, in 1981. What an amazing man!

A straightforward easy shrub rose. Just that small qualm with dieback but the positives outweigh this one fault. To be honest though ‘Thérèse Bugnet’ is rather more of a landscape rose than one for a prime place in your garden,

This post originally appeared on my Facebook blog on 23rd March 2022