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| 'Blush Hip' |
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| 'Blush Hip' |
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| 'Leda' |
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
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| 'Blush Hip' |
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| 'Blush Hip' |
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| 'Leda' |
So, you're stuck, at present, with the poor photograph here, just a tease of color and foliage to sustain you until next year, assuming its rugosa genes allow it to survive drought and cold and deer, and that it doesn't develop a case of rose rosette virus before it reaches maturity.
'Rose à Parfum de l'Hay' is a 1901 introduction by Jules Gravereaux of France. Even though this is a lousy photo, the bloom itself represents the mature color well, those double petals of carmine red displaying their lighter edges. She has a strong fragrance and repeated two more times this year in my garden, albeit playing hide and seek with my camera and schedule. Less mauve and more red than most of the rugosa hybrids, I would guess that she takes her fragrance and color from the 'Général Jacqueminot' grandparent on its mother's side, as it reminds me of that Hybrid Perpetual perhaps more than the pollen R. rugosa rubra parent. My season-old plant is about 1.5 feet high and has three solid and prickly stems at present. Before the cold weather moved it, 'Parfume de l'Hay's foliage was matte medium green, only very mildly rugose, and free of blackspot.
Suzy Verrier, in her Rosa Rugosa, noted that 'Rose à Parfum de l'Hay' is often confused with the more rugose and deeper colored 'Roseraie de l'Hay', but the appearance of my rose would leave me to believe that I received the right cultivar. Both were introduced in the same year in France, and both were meant to honor the renowned rose garden in Val-de-Marne, created in 1899 by Gravereaux on the grounds of an Parisian commune dating back to the time of Charlemagne. Peter Beales included it with the rugosas in his Classic Roses, but noted that its maternal R. damascena x 'Général Jacqueminot' parent confused the classification of the rose. Me, I'm just happy she's in my garden, carrying the weight of history along with her blooms and giving me hope for her survival. Now where, do you suppose, that I can find a 'Roseraie de l'Hay' to plant alongside my 'Parfum' next year?
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| 'Vanguard' |
'Vanguard' is a 1932 rose bred by Glendon A. Stevens, a little-known rosarian from Pennsylvania. 'Vanguard' is a breeding of a seedling of R. wichuraiana and R. rugosa 'Alba' crossed with the old Hybrid Tea 'Eldorado'. Although there have been two recent more roses named 'Eldorado', the parent of 'Vanguard' must have been the orange-blend 1923 Pernetiana Hybrid Tea by Howard and Smith. 'Vanguard' was introduced by Jackson & Perkins and is officially described as salmon-orange, with pink edges. I can't figure out why the rose is not better known, but perhaps it is because little is written about it and some of that is not positive. Peter Beales, in Classic Roses, describes it as "a vigorous shrub, rather untypically Rugosa, and well-foliated with glossy, bronze green leaves." Suzy Verrier, in Rosa Rugosa, doesn't say a lot that is complimentary about the rose, claiming it is barely hardy in her climate and has excessive winterkill. In a comment on helpmefind.com, Paul Barden said "it leaves a great deal to be desired, in my opinion." Osborne sand Powning do list it in Hardy Roses, but hardy to only zone 5. Helpmefind.com lists it as hardy to 4B. I can only add that it had no winter die-back at all here in 6A in its first winter.
Truthfully, to my eye, the rose is a blend of pinks, oranges, and yellows, varying with the weather. Flowers seem to be more pink in colder and wetter weather and yellow as the day warms. The blossoms start out with Hybrid-Tea form, but then open up huge, just huge, about 5 inches across, borne singly or in pairs, and mildly double with about 25 petals. It has a strong and sweet Rugosa-type fragrance and sparse but sharp thorns. It is labeled as once blooming by Verrier, with rare rebloom by Paul Barden, but repeat-blooming by Beales and in Hardy Roses. The websites of Rogue Valley Roses, from which I obtained my rose, and Vintage Roses also both list it as a mild rebloomer, so I do have some hope that Verrier and Barden were, for once, wrong and that I'll see late summer blooms of 'Vanguard'. Perhaps this rose varies rebloom by the climate. I don't know yet if 'Vanguard' forms hips, but some Rugosa-type large red hips would be a perfect Fall finish for the rose.
I think 'Vanguard' is going to become a very large rose here in Kansas, living up to its reported 10 foot height in the references. My one-year-old specimen is already almost 5 foot tall, much taller than the 7 other roses planted in that bed at the same time. It has a nice vase-like structure at this age and I can already see several new canes starting for next year.
Saturday, on Gardenweb.com, I learned that the great rosarian Peter Beales had passed on to a more perfect garden on January 26, 2013, at the age of 76. There are few, I'm sure, in the group of gardeners who love roses or follow rose breeding, that are unaware of Mr. Beales and his legacy of roses. Born on July 22, 1936, he started out early on a path that would lead to a lifetime working with roses, first as an apprentice at LeGrice Roses and then serving as manager of Hillings Rose Nursery in Surrey, working under the guidance of Graham Stuart
Thomas and later succeeding Mr. Thomas as Foreman of Roses. In 1968, he formed Peter Beales Roses in Norfolk, a firm still in existence and found online at www.classicroses.co.uk. He started exhibiting at the RHS Chelsea
Flower Show in 1971 and won 19 Gold medals during his lifetime, the last just in May of 2012. He twice won the
RHS Lawrence Medal for the best exhibit of the year at an RHS
show, and served as president of the Royal National Rose Society in 2003.
Helpmefind.com lists 23 roses bred or discovered by Peter Beales and another 42 roses bred or discovered by his daughter Amanda, who continues to run the business with her brother Richard. I'm sad to admit that not a single one of these roses has made it across the Pond to my garden, at least under their British names, but I'll make an effort to purchase at least one for his legacy in my garden. Where Mr. Beales had his greatest influence on American rosarians, however, lies in the prolific output of his pen. Helpmefind.com lists 9 books on roses authored by Peter Beales. I have copies in my library of the 1992 edition of Roses (1985, Henry Holt), and the 1997 edition of Classic Roses (1985, Henry Holt). Both are classics of the field and I refer to them often for authoritative information on old roses. As a simple testament to Peter Beales' influence in the world of roses, if you look on Amazon at Peter's author page, and then move over to the side where it lists other authors with books purchased by people who have bought Peter's books, that list reads like a Who's Who of rosedom; Clair Martin, Stephen Scanniello, William Welch, Thomas Christopher, David Austin, Graham Stuart Thomas and Liz Druitt, among many others. During a search on Amazon, I learned of his third classic work, Twentieth Century Roses (1988), which I must find a copy of and soon. Later works that I'd never before glimpsed, including A Passion for Roses (2004) and Visions of Roses (1996), also look interesting. Mr. Beales' obituaries also list a 2008 autobiography, Rose Petals and Muddy Footprints, that I can't find for sale anywhere right now, but which I'll keep an eye out for in the future.
If you've spent any quality time among gardening people, you know that they come from all walks of life and exist in all spices and flavors. Even after several years of association with a much varied group of Extension Master Gardeners, I would be hard-pressed to name five common traits among the various personalities. I believe, however, that I have identified one characteristic that all gardeners seem to have in common; generosity. Whether we're digging up starts of daylilies for a passing stranger, handing out flower seeds at garden shows, or just plain sharing our knowledge of our hobby, gardeners are generous to a fault. Well, to be completely honest, except in those few occasions where we've got a new plant that no one else is growing. In that case a little one-up-man-ship is certainly excusable as a very human failing.
The real Sir Thomas Lipton (1848-1931) was a Scotsman who was a persistent America's Cup challenger and who founded the Lipton Tea Company. 'Sir Thomas Lipton', the rose, is a hybrid rugosa introduced in 1900 by Van Fleet, he of 'New Dawn' fame. It was product of a cross between R. rugosa alba and the lovely Polyantha ‘Clotilde Soupert’. My specimen is about 6 years old now and approximately 6 feet tall and 5 feet wide, blooming profusely with fragrant, pure white double flowers that are about 2.5 to 3 inches in diameter. The foliage is rugose, medium green, and wrinkled as fits the heritage of this rose, and it requires no fungal spray here in Kansas summers, nor does it seem to be bothered by any insects. A Missouri website says it may need crown protection in St. Louis, but I highly doubt it. I've never seen any winter dieback here in Manhattan, Kansas, and it also has survived an ice storm unscathed that broke off and flattened large portions of other roses, so I've got a little faith in this rose. At least one source says it's hardy to Zone 3 and I believe it.