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Margaret Furness
most recent 6 APR HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 6 APR by Rebedina
I am wondering if anyone recognizes this beautiful, lightly fragranced rose grown from a cutting taken from a 1920's house in Melbourne, Australia? It has smooth pedicels, dull, narrow leaves and has few thorns.
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Reply #1 of 5 posted 6 APR by Margaret Furness
If you re-open your post you'll find it has grown an Add Photos button.
Does the plant repeat-flower? Does it set hips? Does it sucker when grown from a cutting? Is it a bush or a climber?
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Reply #2 of 5 posted 6 APR by Rebedina
Apologies for the late uploading of photos. The plant in question is a bush and does not sucker. It has round hips and does repeat flower.
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Reply #3 of 5 posted 6 APR by HubertG
For some reason it made me think of Dickson's 'Dean Hole' of 1904, but I don't know how likely it would be for that to have survived.

Rebedina, when you say a cutting taken from a 1920s house, do you have good reason to think it might be of the same era of the house? It could be something from much later.
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Reply #4 of 5 posted 6 APR by Margaret Furness
Nice photos.
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Reply #5 of 5 posted 6 APR by Rebedina
It certainly could be a much later rose, you're right.
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most recent 5 APR HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 2 APR by MeansvilleMom
This is my first post to this most helpful site. I purchased this rose April 7, 2021. She got off to a very slow start with tiny leaves, her few blooms were really small and she stayed overall small. I was advised by David Austin company to be sure to feed her Vigoro, Scotts Rose or Maxicrop. . Even though all my other roses thrived on my feeding regimen, including my beloved D.A. Tottering-by-Gently, I have faithfully been feeding with Vigoro since then. She gets full sun all day, and I keep up with our rain amounts in order to supplement watering in between. This spring, she has come out gangbusters with foliage, and it finally is normal size this year. She has some buds, which look to be normal size. However, this year I noticed some discoloration in some of her leaves. I took a pic and researched and it appears to be Rose Mosaic virus, which would probably explain her slow start and diminutive leaves/blooms? I reported to D.A. and they have already shipped a replacement! Wow! So, my question is, since she is looking healthy right now and the virus, from what I understand, is not contagious to my other roses, should I leave her? Or go ahead and dig her up? I am very sad to do it, since I have been nursing her all this time and looking forward to seeing how this plethora of buds open up here shortly.
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Reply #1 of 1 posted 5 APR by Margaret Furness
I'm told that viruses can spread between roots of nearby roses.
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most recent 1 APR SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 17 AUG by aymo
Hello! Can someone pls help me identify this rose?
We've had this rose for several years, my late father had planted the original one so it's very special to me. It wasn't growing a lot in size, i suspected because it was under the shade of a big tree. So few winters back, i moved it to a sunnier location, but unfortunately it did not survive :(
- It has a very strong musky smell
- It blooms one strong bloom in May and then much weaker ones later (i suspected because of the shade but maybe not)
- It survives snowy winters
Your help is greatly appreciated!
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Reply #1 of 9 posted 17 AUG by Margaret Furness
Is the colour right for Friesia?
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Reply #2 of 9 posted 17 AUG by aymo
Thank you so much! Friesia seems to be the closest i have ever seen to it :)
The color seems to be a bit softer/darker on the yellow side in our rose - and is it for sure a Floribunda from our photo?
any other potential guesses?
Super thanks!!
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Reply #3 of 9 posted 31 MAR by aymo
Any other guesses? could it be 'Buff Beauty' ?
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Reply #4 of 9 posted 31 MAR by Lee H.
Photos can be misleading, but compared to my BB, the yellow looks a little too saturated. Also, BB definitely likes to climb, even under a tree. Mine is cohabitating well in the branches of a small dogwood
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Reply #5 of 9 posted 1 APR by Patricia Routley
Golden Jubilee (hybrid tea, pre 2014) is my guess, but I really don't know if this Australian rose ever got to Germany.
An actual planting year, rather than "several years ago" might help you eliminate some contenders.
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Reply #6 of 9 posted 1 APR by aymo
Thank you, it was planted i would say more than 20 years ago! not sure it's golden jubilee as it doesn't have those pink hews on the sides of the petals.
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Reply #7 of 9 posted 1 APR by aymo
thank you! i believe there's two 'versions' of Buff Beauty - the Climber and the Shrub.
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Reply #8 of 9 posted 1 APR by Lee H.
Is there? I don’t see it listed.
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Reply #9 of 9 posted 1 APR by Patricia Routley
There is only the one - Buff Beauty (Hybrid Musk, Bentall, 1939)
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most recent 26 MAR SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 21 MAY 11 by anerpolytropos
E. Veyrat Hermanos, cl T. The rose evidently does very well indeed on a wall at the Heritage rose firm in California. Mine was rather slow at the start but after 3 years has occupied the top of an arbor in my garden, and now is being led from there to a tree. Growth is fine, flowering is not. It balls constantly, only exceptionally opening very fine golden yellow flowers with cerise or other pink touches. Some have been reasonably large, others of middle-size. It scarcely blooms the rest of the year at all. This reticence to open has me puzzled, since it is hot but humid here in Richmond Va. during the summer. However, somehow I picked up a small book of 131 pages titled "The National Rose Society. The Society's Official Catalogue of Roses. 1913 edition. Compiled by a committee of the Society, Proof copy for notes and corrections," Croyden 1913. Roses are given name, class, breeder, year, and disappointingly few notes on culture. This copy belonged to the English breeder and nurseryman of roses George Paul the younger in Cheshunt, England; each page is faced by a blank page for editors' comments; its owner made none, unfortunately. Paul's father of the same name had died in mid-19th cent., and the sad thing about this edition of 1913 is that in the next year England plunged into an avoidable WWI in which she saw a generation of Englishmen massacred.
The rose is vigorous and trouble free, though it blackspots somewhat; it seems winter-hardy here, where temperatures seldom drop below 32 degrees F. My trouble with Hermanos was explained the on p. 31: "Best against a wall." Mine isn't. Full sun and growth in good air-circulation is not enough. I'll leave it until fall, then give it away (2011) if it doesn't perform in the interim. Unfortunately I have no convenient wall where it might thrive in the future.
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Reply #1 of 3 posted 21 MAY 11 by jedmar
Our E. Veyrat Hermanos froze down to the ground this winter, but is now producing several new canes.
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Reply #2 of 3 posted 22 MAY 11 by Margaret Furness
In my garden, zone 9b, mediterranean climate, it balls all spring. The autumn blooms are wonderful, but whether they repay the plant's looking disgusting in spring is a matter of debate. But see the spring photo from Sacramento.
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Reply #3 of 3 posted 26 MAR by Wrenn_M_zone7
Hi there - I also live in Richmond and was wondering if you have an update as to how this rose has performed for you? I have acquired one and am trying to decide where to plant it in my garden. Thanks!
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