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'Rose de Champagne pompon' rose Reviews & Comments
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Help -- anyone ii just joined today and did get a comment, I was in middle of typing and when I finished, the comment was gone.........oops, it is somewhere, but how do I find and and how do I leave a comment......thanks friends
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#1 of 1 posted
25 JUN 23 by
jedmar
Cannot see any other comments from you. You need to press the Continue button for them to be posted.
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According to A. Hardy's Catalogue des Rosiers cultives au Jardin du Luxembourg of 1837, 'de Meaux' is ascribed to Desfontaines (Rene-Louiche Desfontaines (1750-1833), a French botanist who became chair of the Royal Garden des Plantes in 1786). If Hardy is correct, then the date assigned here on HMF is incorrect. And we know the source of the rose.
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If Desfontaines (Rene-Louiche Desfontaines (1750-1833) was born in 1750, he must have been a child prodigy. . Our first two references are from 1755 and 1764.
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#2 of 4 posted
25 MAR 20 by
Darrell
Which is why I began my sentence with "If Hardy is correct." But apparently he wasn't. He doesn't state that Desfontaines was the originator of the rose. He merely abbreviates his name after listing the rose. Perhaps he meant Desfontaines introduced it to France from, say, the low countries. Perhaps he was wrong. Perhaps he got the dates wrong. I've always maintained that just because we find a statement in print, whether of a few hundred years ago or now, doesn't mean the information is correct. Back to the archives.
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#3 of 4 posted
25 MAR 20 by
jedmar
Hardy's "attributions" do not per se mean breeder or introducer. He refers offers to the Botanical work where the rose is mentioned, as e.g. Nouveau Duhamel, or Thory, or Pronville; or he lists provenances. One can see the latter clearly when he groups rose names as synonyms, e.g. Duc d'Angoulême, Vibert Reine d'Espagne, Dubourg Douai Impératrice Marie Thérèse, Bruxelles Grande Duchesse, idem Grandesse Royale, Enghien Pucelle de Waubrosken, Saudeur Beau présent, Madame Faber
This was all the same rose for Hardy and he seems to have received it under the different names from these various nurseries. It does not mean that any one of them was the breeder.
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#4 of 4 posted
25 MAR 20 by
Darrell
Ah! Thank you for the clarification, Behcet.
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Initial post
30 SEP 14 by
Unregistered Guest
Available from - David Austin https://www.davidaustinroses.com
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Initial post
17 JUL 12 by
Cradoc
Simply the most black-spotty thing I've ever grown. It looked like someone had tipped a bottle of Indian Ink over the plant. Although I sprayed regularly, it succumbed in very short order. A pity as the flowers were quite sweet although the scent was rather slight. Perhaps it does better in climates other than cool temperate?
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Thanks for taking the time to share your experience - this is VERY helpful and just what HMF is all about.
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