HelpMeFind Roses, Clematis and Peonies
Roses, Clematis and Peonies
and everything gardening related.
Member
Profile
PhotosFavoritesCommentsJournal 
zilredloh
most recent 5 JUN SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 2 JUN by zilredloh
I have two roses I'm trying to identify and was hoping this group could help. (Will put roses in two different threads for ease of responding).

I live in Chicago, and was taking a walk in Jackson Park in a wooded landscape space outside the Japanese garden (Garden of the Phoenix). And I was surprised to come across a rose in a woodland setting there and I'm very curious what it could be.

It was receiving sun at the time, but definitely was also in a shaded area and seemed to be thriving. (Part-sun) Very minimal thorns, found long canes but appeared to be a bushy habit, 4-5' tall, matte green leaves, a delicate spicy, sweet fragrance to the flower.
REPLY
Reply #1 of 3 posted 3 JUN by Patricia Routley
Could it be ‘Therese Bugnet’ 1941?
REPLY
Reply #2 of 3 posted 5 JUN by zilredloh
I think that could be it. The only difference I could see from online images of 'Therese Bugnet' is the size of the bloom, but it's probably nominal. Thanks!!
REPLY
Reply #3 of 3 posted 5 JUN by Patricia Routley
A pleasure zilredloh. You gave us excellent photos to play with.
REPLY
most recent 3 JUN HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 2 JUN by zilredloh
I'm trying to identify what rose this could possibly be (looks similar to my first one, but not the same).

This rose is in my neighbor's garden (she has since passed away and new owners at the property). I know she was a great gardener, but her plot has since gone downhill these past 15 years with neglect. This rose keeps peeking out of a mass of weeds and I'd like to save it just in case it's an older or rare rose, not to mention beautiful.

I believe this only blooms once (but also never saw it deadheaded). It has very large, long, thorny canes (but not sure if it's because it's trying to grow tall and bust through the weeds). It's more in the 6' range in height, but could be longer than I realize. Flowers are 2.5 to 3 inches in diameter, with a sweet and spicy fragrance, color is pink from afar with a blue/violet undertone.

Thoughts??
REPLY
Reply #1 of 1 posted 3 JUN by Patricia Routley
I have seen a similar faint stripe on my possible ‘Queen of the Bourbons’. Your photos were excellent by the way, giving us good details to attempt an identification.
REPLY
© 2024 HelpMeFind.com