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Margaret Furness
most recent yesterday SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 18 APR by Margaret Furness
So the question arises: did it sport or revert?
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Reply #1 of 1 posted yesterday by Deborah Petersen
Wouldn't we all like to know! The variant bloom is quite pretty.
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most recent 4 days ago SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 19 MAY by Margaret Furness
I looked this up because the name seemed unusual. From Wikipedia: "Château Gruaud-Larose is a winery in the Saint-Julien appellation of the Bordeaux region of France. It is also the name of the red wine produced by this property. The wine produced here was classified as one of fifteen Deuxièmes Crus in the original Bordeaux Wine Official Classification of 1855."
You'd think they would have been offered a red rose.
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Reply #1 of 4 posted 19 JUN by Nastarana
The rose pictured is stunningly beautiful. This could perhaps be sold in the USA as e.g., Rose Castle, a clumsy translation to be sure, but one which might not put off a buying public which must have its' easy to remember names.
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Reply #2 of 4 posted 8 JUL by PierreLaPierre
I can confirm that this rose is indeed stunning and have planted 3 here in our gardens. We are in the lower Cévennes France Zone 7a or 7b. The scent is of lychee fruit and very pleasant it is too. Our soil is slightly acidic and the first bare-root was planted three years ago and after six months in October finally flowered with one solitary but stunning rose the second season was very generous and gave us huge clusters like a floribunda which were simply ready made bouquets ( see photos from last summer ). Now I’ve pegged it and stands almost six foot tall and has blooms all over and is one of the healthiest roses here with next to no BS.
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Reply #3 of 4 posted 4 days ago by RoseLover1
Hello,
I purchased a Gruaud Larose through Palatine. How much sun does yours receive (ex: full sun, morning sun/afternoon shade)?
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Reply #4 of 4 posted 4 days ago by PierreLaPierre
Hello Roselover1

Our most mature plant receives full sun it is pointing almost due south. In fact just had some friends visit the gardens earlier and Gruaud had one saturated ( we’ve had a week of very heavy rain ) half-open flower poking out so I picked it off and presented it as a gift to one of the visitors. With all the rain I wasn’t expecting the rose to have much of a scent but voilà - yes quite perfumed with a strong citrus-lychee note. Lovely scent.

We have four now and the mature one is 3 years old standing at well over 6ft tall and 4ft + wide after only light pruning in March. There must be well over 150 buds on it right now.

Happy gardening. Peter

PS this one is in it’s fourth season was quite slow to develop took around 18 months to establish, one flower then 3-4 then last year dozens and dozens sometimes in groups of 5 or 6 held up almost in a ready-made bouquet.
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PhotoLaneii
most recent 5 days ago HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 6 days ago by Anna Mertens
Could you please share if this rose blooms later in the summer/autumn time? I think to buy it, but not a lot information how she is blooming after first wave.
Thank you so much in advance
With best regards,
Anna
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Reply #1 of 2 posted 6 days ago by Margaret Furness
I have not seen any repeat flower after the spring flowering (in Australia, where it is a survivor rose in churchyards).
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Reply #2 of 2 posted 5 days ago by Anna Mertens
Thank you so much!
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most recent 5 days ago HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 5 days ago by ChrisBC
Does this rose produce hips? The Austin UK website says it does, but the US site does not mention it.
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Reply #1 of 1 posted 5 days ago by Margaret Furness
It does have one descendant listed as 'Seedling of Malvern Hills x Penelope'.
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