For fellow rose-nuts who want to grow the unusual, I would recommend that they try 'Basye's Purple Rose' as a candidate for scratching that particular thorny itch. For the photographers among the group, it will also present the challenge of correctly capturing the difficult wine-red color into a digital file. As you can see from the varying hues represented by the photographs on this page, that is not an easy task. The first photo, at the left here, best captures the exact tint and hue according to my eyes. Iphone photos of this rose, like the second picture here, often turn out truly awful. I've mentioned it in this blog before, but I like it enough that I felt it deserved a page of its very own.
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William Welch, Basye rejected the rose as "a jewel in the rough", but the rose made it to commerce nonetheless, perhaps through stock given to Welch by Basye in 1983. A cross of R. foliolosa and R. rugosa rubra, I've placed it in my mind as a Hybrid Rugosa, although I suppose it could just alternatively just as easily be described as a Hybrid Foliolosa. Blooms are single with 5 petals, about 2.5 inches wide, have a mild fragrance to my nose, and repeat sporadically. After the first flush the bush usually has a few blooms on it, but it won't make a large impact on garden color for the rest of the season. I've seen the color described in various sources as "rich cabernet-red", "fuchsia", "magenta", and "rich wine-crimson with strong purple tones". Personally, I would incorporate the velvety texture of the petals into my description of the color and tell the reader that the petals were cut out of the royal purplish-red robe of an English king.
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There are reports that 'Basye's Purple Rose' is tetraploid and fertile with modern roses. Paul Barden listed the rose as "likely my very favorite Rugosa and certainly one of my favourite roses period. Few, however, seem interested in the rose as breeding stock. Kim Rupert perhaps stated it most clearly in a post on helpmefind.com/rose where he said "Able to be crossed with other roses, but far from willing and extremely willing to pass on awful plant architecture....a truly awful choice for breeding."