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'Red Intuition' |
And ever since then, I've been waiting still. The bare-root, grafted rose came on time, went straight into the ground, and began to leaf out. I had a brief scare with our very late April frost, which knocked it back a bit even though I had covered it up overnight, but it shook off the frostbite and eventually sent up a bud. A bud that opened slightly 3 days ago, as you can see below at the left, and then proceeded to tease me petal by petal until today, in the late afternoon, when it was finally fully open (as above) and met all my expectations.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjUoHYe6g9PtMZrUoru38E64gKuutgPDCoO6XRpPZpWl-XQfBqOfBtZ7oJgAvxB3Sg7D6Yz_-nOXjJoLlJ77vEgSnWATSp8x297pvo2kx3OHsLP9tR_c_Ob3b9P6r1dYt-AN-EYDNGLa8Tk/s1600/comp+Red+Intuition060814+(15)b.jpg)
'Red Intuition' is certainly a beautiful rose all on its own, but my interest in it goes far deeper than its stripes. There is a "lost" Griffith Buck Hybrid Tea rose that Dr. Buck patented and named 'Red Sparkler' and I'm playing a hunch. I've only seen one really poor picture of it (the same picture is reproduced everywhere), and to my eyes it was the splitting image of 'Red Intuition'. Official notes indicate that 'Red Sparkler' was the same 4.5" diameter size as 'Red Intuition' and had a similar number of petals, but it differs in that it is listed as a velvety red rose with pink AND WHITE stripes so maybe I'm all wet. My concern is that 'Red Intuition' has leathery, semi-glossy foliage, while 'Belle Rouge' reportedly has glossy foliage, so if 'Red Intution' is a sport of the latter, it was a double sport, both in foliage and in flower color. That would be darned unusual. Add that to a rumor that Dr. Buck is rumored to have sent bud wood of 'Red Sparkler' to Europe at one time and maybe you can understand why I'm going to get a plant of 'Belle Rouge' and grow it right next to my 'Red Intuition' to compare the foliage. Just in case the lost rose isn't really lost.