|
'Ann Endt' rose Reviews & Comments
-
-
Angel Gardens and Heirloom Roses both are maintaining waiting lists for Ann Endt. They currently are the only commercial sources for it in the United States, so encourage them and get on a waiting list.
|
REPLY
|
I'm budding my own now. It's probably faster if you know someone who'll share.
|
REPLY
|
-
-
It starts flowering later in the season than some rugosas and rugosa hybrids.
|
REPLY
|
-
-
I received what looks like this rose in 1993 as r. foliolosa x r. rugosa. this indicated Vilmorins rose but that has a reference as remontant which my plant isn't. is 'Ann Endt' remontant?
|
REPLY
|
In my garden (zone 9b, Mediterranean climate), 'Ann Endt' is convincingly recurrent. There's a reference saying that Vilmorin's rose was light yellowish-pink, so 'Ann Endt' is a different rose: glowing magenta/cherry.
|
REPLY
|
Ann Endt is remontant. Very curious to know more about your plant Becky.
|
REPLY
|
It is just like 'Ann Endt' in colour and prickles but it is not repeat flowering. It came from a nursery in south Devon which no longer exists. I am adding a photo under the R.foliolosa x Rosa rugosa description.
|
REPLY
|
Thanks for that. Nancy Steen brought 'Ann Endt' back from Europe and I always wondered if Ann Endt was not in fact Vilmorin's R.foliolosa x Rosa rugosa...
|
REPLY
|
Hi Jocelen, Has evidence arisen to counter Ken Nobbs in the 1978 reference?
|
REPLY
|
-
-
A rose possibly bred by Maurice de Vilmorin.
|
REPLY
|
Reply
#1 of 8 posted
6 DEC 07 by
Cass
This is a found rose, isn't it, given the study name "Ann Endt"?
Do you have an idea of the actual identity?
|
REPLY
|
Are you having trouble posting a reply ?
|
REPLY
|
See Rosa foliolosa x Rosa rugosa by Maurice Leveque de Vilmorin.
|
REPLY
|
Vilmorin described his rose as light yellowish-pink, so "Ann Endt" isn't his.
|
REPLY
|
I know it was a long time ago, but could you reference Vilmorin's description of this rose? I am intrigued by the "light yellowish-pink".
|
REPLY
|
See the Comment by cyberose of 13 April 2013, on the R foliolosa x R rugosa page. That's all I know about it, sorry.
|
REPLY
|
|