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Roses, Clematis and Peonies
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Rosen (Trechslin) Vol. 1
(1962)  Page(s) 18-19.  Includes photo(s).
 
American Pillar (Rambler, Conard et Co 1908) - This is an extraordinarily vigorous rose variety, which often produces in one summer canes of over four meter length, which are then richly decorated all over with rose clusters in the next year. The medium sized single blooms are vivid pink with a white eye. This rose can be used well for hedges, which are filled in June/July with thousands and thousands of small roses. She thrives very well also as a weeping rose.
(1962)  Page(s) 64-65.  Includes photo(s).
 
Beauté (hybrid tea, Meilland 1953) - A pretty plant with glossy foliage, which is disease-resistant. The elegant elongated buds are a warm apricot-red, on the other hand the base of the large petals is yellowish. Also this is a magnificent plant, which is very decorative.
(1962)  Page(s) 60-61.  Includes photo(s).
 
Bettina (hybrid tea, Meilland 1953) - What magnificent blooms! The thirtyfive petals of the curiously top-like bloom expand quite harmoniously, without ever revealing the centre. The colour, an orange shaded with salmon-pink, with warm red veining, gives more substance to the blooms. This magnificent variety is very demanded for garden planting and as cut flower.
(1962)  Page(s) 44-45.  Includes photo(s).
 
Concerto (hybrid polyantha, Meilland 1953) - Concerto takes one of the first ranks among the beautiful small-bloomed roses, thanks to its extraordinary floriferousness, its beautiful glossy green foliage and vigourous habit. The blooms are glowing geranium-red. This rose looks incomparably beautiful.
(1962)  Page(s) 56-57.  Includes photo(s).
 
Confidence (hybrid tea, Meilland 1951) - Is a beautiful rose with delicious fragrance and noble, elegant form. The soft yellow of the inside passes to a gossamery pink at the edge of the petals. The well-developed foliage and the light bloom colours make this rose to one of the most demanded. Received the Gold Medal at Bagatelle in 1951.
(1962)  Page(s) 50-51.  Includes photo(s).
 
Eden Rose (hybrid tea, Meilland 1950) - Has fragrant, very large and full blooms, which pass slowly from the deep pink of the Neyron-rose to cyclamen, with silvery rosy reverse. The colours confer the blooms a special aura.
(1962)  Page(s) 36-37.  Includes photo(s).
 
Ena Harkness (hybrid tea, Norman-Harkness 1946) - She belongs to the best english roses of the last years. Distinguishes itself through rich, almost uninterrupted blooming. As demanded for cut flower as a bedding rose. Vigorous and densely foliated.
(1962)  Page(s) 24-25.  Includes photo(s).
 
Étoile de Hollande (hybrid tea, Verschuren 1919) - This is a classical rose, which owes its reputation to its deliciously fragrant, deep dark red blooms, shimmering with velvety reflexes and to the beautiful buds, which cannot be more perfect and expand very slowly. She is a grateful bloomer. Her blooms are magnificent also when cut. Despite her age, Etoile de Hollande remains still one of the best red-bloomed sorts. Her climbing form is of remarkable vigour. There is also an equally beautiful short form.
(1962)  Page(s) 24-25.  Includes photo(s).
 
Étoile de Hollande (hybrid tea, Verschuren 1919) - This is a classical rose, which owes its reputation to its deliciously fragrant, deep dark red blooms, shimmering with velvety reflexes and to the beautiful buds, which cannot be more perfect and expand very slowly. She is a grateful bloomer. Her blooms are magnificent also when cut. Despite her age, Etoile de Hollande remains still one of the best red-bloomed sorts. Her climbing form is of remarkable vigour. There is also an equally beautiful short form.
(1962)  Page(s) 16-17.  Includes photo(s).
 
Frau Karl Druschki (Reine des Neiges, hybrid perpetual, V. Lambert 1900) - The Snow Queen has become popular via her magnificent white blooms. She is a hybrid perpetual and not a hybrid tea, due to which she reblooms often only towards the end of summer after a strong first bloom in June. In southern regions she is often cultivated as a cut rose, as there is no other variety which has such pure white blooms. The rose bushes are so vigorous that sometimes they produce canes of two meters height within one year. It can happen in autumn that individual outer petals are shaded slightly pink. The blooms are unfortunately without fragrance.
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