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'Jessie Clark' rose Reviews & Comments
Discussion id : 117-549
most recent 14 JUL 19 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 14 JUL 19 by Patricia Routley
The quoted parentage of R. gigantea x 'Mme. Martignier did not appear until 1993. It would be good to have an earlier reference.
I note the two 1st generation descendants, ‘Lorraine Lee’ and ‘Nancy Hayward’ but it would be good also to have photos of ‘Jessie Clark’s hips.
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Reply #1 of 6 posted 14 JUL 19 by HubertG
My 'Jessie Clark' was accidentally poisoned by the neigbours when it grew into their Murraya hedge. :-(
I still miss it, but I can confirm that every flower set a large round hip that was yellowish-orange when ripe. There were always lots of seeds inside and the germination rate was quite high. I don't have any surviving seedlings from that time, but recently I found an intact hip from a cross I made using 'Semperflorens' back in 2008, that had been left in a drawer, forgotten about until 2018 when I planted the seeds. The hip had essentially mummified. One seed germinated in late January this year which I still find rather amazing given its age. The seedling doesn't look like it will be repeat flowering at this stage. I don't think that I have any photos of the hips of 'Jessie Clark' but I'll look anyway.
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Reply #2 of 6 posted 14 JUL 19 by Patricia Routley
Thanks HubertG. I have added “Sets hips” to ‘Jessie Clark’.
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Reply #3 of 6 posted 14 JUL 19 by HubertG
Regarding early references to 'Mme. Martignier' being the pollen parent to 'Jessie Clark' - I seem to remember an article where Alister Clark wrote about visiting someone's garden (Editor Stewart's??) who still grew 'Mme. Martiginier', and Clark commenting that it was the grandparent to 'Lorraine Lee' via 'Jessie Clark' . I thought the reference was somewhere here, but I can't seem to find it. Perhaps it was in an old Australian Rose Annual. Does this sound familiar to anyone?
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Reply #4 of 6 posted 14 JUL 19 by jedmar
Check the "Australian and New Zealand Rose Annual", 1928, p. 52. Google's snippet view states: Jessie Clark (Hyb. Gig.), Alister Clark, Vic. ... It is a cross between Gigantea and Madame Martignier, the result being the largest single Rose in cultivation.
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Reply #5 of 6 posted 14 JUL 19 by HubertG
Thanks Jedmar. I can't access it but it does confirm the parentage pretty early on.
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Reply #6 of 6 posted 14 JUL 19 by Patricia Routley
I have added the reference. It was from the 1931 Australian Rose Annual.
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