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"Bernice Mitchell's Rose" Reviews & Comments
Discussion id : 169-082
most recent 12 days ago HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 12 days ago by Margaret Furness
Available from Leonie Kearney Heritage Roses, Samsonvale, Queensland.
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Discussion id : 49-802
most recent 6 JAN 18 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 17 NOV 10 by Patricia Routley
I wonder could "Bernice Mitchell's Rose" be 'Sweet Chariot'?
I now have both but it will take me a year to grow 'Sweet Chariot' on to get a comparison.
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Reply #1 of 6 posted 26 DEC 10 by Margaret Furness
I understand that "Bernice Mitchell's Rose" was found in a Riverland garden - can't remember whether NSW or Victoria.
I have it growing about 2.5m away from Sweet Chariot. It started flowering earlier than SC this spring. It pales faster than SC so that it appears to be a paler mauve, but in fact it is the same colour when first open. To me Sweet Chariot's leaves have a slight gloss. I don't pick up more than mild scent from either. I have another plant of "Bernice Mitchell's" in a different part of the garden; it is 4 - 5 years old, own-root and is 2m across and 1.4m high, but I see that others have found Sweet Chariot getting big in a warm climate.
In other words, I can't decide whether it's the same or different.
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Reply #2 of 6 posted 26 DEC 10 by Patricia Routley
Thanks Margaret.
I've planted 'Sweet Chariot' 2-3 metres away from my "Bernice Mitchell's Rose" which is as close as I could get it, so now just have to wait and watch. Understand perfectly about the same or different indecision. We just need another couple of years and then the roses will tell us themselves.
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Reply #3 of 6 posted 26 JUL 11 by Margaret Furness
Comparing them in midwinter, I'm confident that Sweet Chariot and "Bernice Mitchell's" are not the same rose. Sweet Chariot is very densely-stemmed, in the way of minis, and its stems are green. Bernice Mitchell's stems are burgundy, and vastly more prickly.
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Reply #4 of 6 posted 6 JAN 18 by Meryl
I have only just come across this quite old discussion about whether Bernice Mitchell's Rose and Sweet Chariot are one and the same. I used to grow Sweet Chariot and found it a martyr to Black Spot. However the Bernice Mitchell's Rose I have now is delightfully healthy.
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Reply #5 of 6 posted 6 JAN 18 by Andrew from Dolton
'Bernice Mitchell's Rose' has a look of 'De La Grifferaie' about it. http://www.helpmefind.com/rose/l.php?l=21.269839
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Reply #6 of 6 posted 6 JAN 18 by Margaret Furness
Might be somewhere in the ancestry. The flowers are much smaller, and it repeats very well. But one to admire from the outside - not putting your hands into it.
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Discussion id : 73-967
most recent 8 SEP 13 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 8 SEP 13 by Simon Voorwinde
I am SO going to hit this with striped rose pollen this season! Imagine a plant with a shrub form like this covered with in-your-face stripes LOL This + 'Peppermint Twist' sounds liker a nice match-up! Maybe even some blotched pollen too.
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Discussion id : 46-204
most recent 26 JUN 10 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 26 JUN 10 by Margaret Furness
Hedgerow nursery was the source of my plant, but it isn't on their 2010 catalogue.
www.hedgerownursery.com.au
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