HelpMeFind Roses, Clematis and Peonies
Roses, Clematis and Peonies
and everything gardening related.
DescriptionPhotosLineageAwardsReferencesMember RatingsMember CommentsMember JournalsCuttingsGardensBuy From 
'Maid of Honour' rose Reviews & Comments
Discussion id : 13-709
most recent 29 NOV 15 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 15 AUG 06 by Unregistered Guest

Which is the real Maid of Honor rose? There seems to be two different roses in the pictures submitted - a yellow one with a more rounded flower, and an orange bicolor with a very pointed HT form. I bougfht this rose (as an unpatented rose) and it looks like the latter. However, the description says yellow blend for the Weddle-bred rose.


Maybe the bicolor version is the Kordes rose of the same name (that is listed as extinct)? It looks like it certainly is not extinct. And that's probably a good thing!

REPLY
Reply #1 of 3 posted 4 OCT 07 by Unregistered Guest
we have had the "yellow" version of Maid of Honor for about 12 years. The yellow is really closer to Diamond Jubilee and often reminds one of French Lace. This year I had a single rose which was of the orange bi-color variety among dozens of the yellow versions. The only explaination I could think of was that it was a sport. Perhaps one of the varieties, either the "yellow" or the "orange bi-color" was originally a sport. I have a feeling that perhaps the "orange bi-color" is the sport. After the bush reaches maturity it is not uncommon to have dozens of long stem roses at a time. A couple of years ago we had over 40 long stem blooms at one time. A fantastic cutting rose that provides roses in clusters and long stems all season long. It is the best rose I have ever raised for cut roses. Beautiful form and pleasant fragrance. Sometimes the centers are to the pale orange side and at other times to the pale pink. Just a great, huge rose that acts more like a shrub rose for us than a hybrid tea. Maybe some one more with more knowledge about roses can explain the two varieties.
REPLY
Reply #2 of 3 posted 6 DEC 09 by John Moody
What happens to Maid of Honor is called a reversion. When a sport plant puts out a flower the same as the original sports parent=in this case it is the orange/yellow Folklore=this is called a reversion. Many sports will do this. There can be as few as only one "other" colored rose on the bush to some that I have seen where half of the bush is the color of the sport and the other is the sport parent. The reversion is because the the sport is termed "unstable".
REPLY
Reply #3 of 3 posted 29 NOV 15 by Michael Garhart
Hi, John,

Do you mean 'European Touch'? 'Maid of Honour' is a seedling of 'Folklore'. This lineage does mutate a lot, so it would not be surprising if 'Maid of Honour' also had an orange sport.

I have seen a 12' 'Folklore', so I would not be shocked to see a 12' 'Maid Of Honour'. This line of roses grow to amazing sizes, and they also tend to be prone to mildew.

3 years of 'Folklore' alone was enough for me to reconsider other orange roses.
REPLY
Discussion id : 13-891
most recent 23 SEP 10 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 31 AUG 06 by LochWes
I purchased my Maid of Honor as a bare root climber. The flower color is yellow/orange centered blending to coral on the petal tips. The colors are similar to photos I have seen of its parent, Folklore. The Maid of Honor flower eventually fades to a single, slightly lighter shade of coral. My climber is headed toward a healthy 6' in the first year while continually flowering on individual stems. It is the most pleasant surprise of the roses I planted this year.
REPLY
Reply #1 of 5 posted 20 SEP 10 by Dianne's Southwest Idaho Rose Garden
There is a separate category on HMF for the climbing version of Maid of Honor, and it is listed as an orange blend. Perhaps you could move your photos to that category? Since there aren't any photos of that rose yet, I'm sure they would be appreciated there.
REPLY
Reply #2 of 5 posted 20 SEP 10 by LochWes
Thank you for noticing new category. Will move photo/comments there.
REPLY
Reply #3 of 5 posted 21 SEP 10 by jedmar
The height info of 4' to 12' seems to cover both the bush and the climbing version. Has anyone experience how tall the HT really gets?
REPLY
Reply #4 of 5 posted 23 SEP 10 by Kim Rupert
Hi Jedmar, many years ago, I managed a specialty rose nursery here in the Los Angeles area called Limberlost Roses. Bob Edberg, who started the nursery and sold it to a landscape company (for whom I managed it), bought MANY of the roses from Hortico in Canada. Bride's Dream was one of them. In fifteen gallon cans, Bride's Dream was 7' - 8' tall with wrist thick canes toward the bottoms of the monster plants. Ironically, I know someone who also purchased roses from Hortico, and for whom, the root stock suckers from those plants, turned out to be Bride's Dream. Very odd seeing MORE vigorous root stock shoots with Bride's Dream flowers!
REPLY
Reply #5 of 5 posted 23 SEP 10 by jedmar
It seems California is very friendly to rose growth! We imported some bare roots into Europe from Cal and they were such clubs, too! I will change the upper limit for Bride's Dream to 8'.
REPLY
Discussion id : 30-356
most recent 15 SEP 08 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 15 SEP 08 by Unregistered Guest
Available from - Pickering
www.pickeringnurseries.com
REPLY
© 2024 HelpMeFind.com