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'Triomphe de Bayeux' rose References
Book (1870) Page(s) 157. All the summer Roses which I have selected for pillars, omitting Paul Ricaut, are equally to be commended for arches also, and soon meet each other upon them when generously and judiciously treated. To the latter I would add Triomphe de Bayeux, Hybrid China, a variety of remarkable vigour, with delicate flowers, resembling those of a Tea-scented Rose, and invaluable in the bud for bouquets and button-holes.
Book (1870) Page(s) 289. March is the month for our final pruning. I say final, because all the longer shoots will have been previously shortened in October. Different varieties will, of course, require different treatment; and the intentions of the operator, as well as the habit of the tree, will direct the manipulation of the knife. Some Roses of very vigorous growth, such as Blairii 2 and Charles Lawson, Triomphe de Bayeux and Persian Yellow, will not flower at all if they are closely pruned. They will need little more excision than that which they have already received- only the removal of any weak or injured wood. Ten or twelve eyes may be left upon the healthy shoots.
Book (1866) Page(s) 129. The Hybrid Chinese Rose. The following are among the best of this family of roses: [...] Triomphe de Bayeux is white, and an excellent pillar-rose.
Book (1854) Page(s) 34. The Hybrid China Rose. Triomphe de Bayeux, the only white hybrid China rose known, is even more vigorous in its habit than ChĂȘnedolĂ©, and, like all the roses of this family, only adopted for a large standard as a pillar rose, now that we have our beautiful Hybrid Perpetual Roses as ever-blooming bushes for our rose beds.
Book (1853) Page(s) 12. The Hybrid Chinese. 176. Triomphe de Bayeux; flowers white, centre straw colour, large and fine; form, globular. Growth, vigorous.
Magazine (May 1849) Page(s) 77. Rosa Multiflora....Triomphe de Bayeux - White, centred, straw-coloured flowers, in corymbs, or flat heads, of bloom.
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