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 (19 Oct 1996)  
 Hector Deane was our family surgeon. He took out my tonsils, in bed, at home, when I was circa 4 yrs old. I remember it vividly as my woolly stuffed bunny rabbit wet the bed that night, and I got blamed for it:)
 
 Hector lived to a ripe old age, and always boasted about his rose. I didn't dare tell him he was a so-and-so for rust. He had a fantastic perfume.
 
 Sam McGredy
 
 
 
 (11 May 1996)  
 The most neglected rose of mine in rosebreeding has to be Paddy Stephens.
 It has great potential.
 
 Sam McGredy
 
 
 
 (17 May 1996)  
 mjpi...@ix.netcom.com(Judy Pineda ) wrote:
 >
 >"At first sight, "Paddy Stevens" looks to be a straight coral-rose, (clip)
 >So Sam, it sounds lovely.  Has it been introduced in America yet?
 >*****************************************************************
 No, nor will it be. The flower goes absolutely tiny in your heat.
 --
 Sam McGredy
 
 
 
 (16 Feb 1999)  
 I have nothing against the original intentions of David Austin, i.e. to produce modern roses with old-fashioned looking blooms. In fact I very much like a number of his releases. What I dislike is how they have become a sort of cult following. I think it rather sad and narrow-minded that people will devote their entire rose garden to Austin cultivars - or to roses from any one breeder for that matter!. I also feel that Austin roses are now all becoming much of a muchness - there really is nothing novel anymore, yet people continue to buy them as though they are obsessed. What is very interesting here in New Zealand is that a local breeder, Bob Matthews, is focussing on producing Austin-like blooms on far more compact floribundas. He has produced an exceptional white named <b>Pure Magic</b> by crossing Sexy Rexy with Graham Thomas; and a very nice apricot bred from Abraham Darby. This line of thinking has a great future in my opinion.
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 Doug Bone
 Auckland Regional Botanic Gardens
 Aotearoa - New Zealand
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