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This plant returned with just snow mulch in Alaska.
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I believe it. I had a devastating winter a year ago that froze nearly everything dead to the ground but Crested Moss didn’t even blink.
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This rose was ignored for two years while the house was vacant but still thrived every summer. It was one of the reasons we bought the place! (western Oregon)
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Jackson & Perkins site says it has a strong pear fragrance. Your post says none to mild. I'd like to hear from growers for their comment on the aroma.
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In this case, the information on the rose page came from the registration material submitted by J & P to the ARS.
Smiles, Lyn
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I have this rose and love it. Mine has a strong fruity fragrance.
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Mine just started blooming and I would categorize the fragrance as a medium, delicious fruity scent. This is a gorgeous rose, starting out a deep orange and fading to salmon pink. The stems are strong enough to hold the large blooms upright. In our garden showing incredible disease resistance!
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Our Sedona has a wonderfully rich fruity fragrance. It is also one of the most beautiful flowers of all the plants in our rose collection. Healthy, vigorous, and generous with huge, long lasting blooms. We're going to get another next spring. Wonderful!
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Im in southern california and my Sedona has almost no smell. This is its 3rd year and this spring i happened to notice a very light fragrance. but now that its getting hot, its scentless again ????♀️
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I received this rose from a reputable supplier but it isn't as deep a color as the others shown on this site. Its form is the same and it is very hardy. It returned here in Alaska with just snow protection. Fragrant Cloud, a parent plant, also does well with returning here. NOTICE: This was posted in 2007, before I saw other pictures of this rose. Obviously, there was a mix up in the labels when I received it. I don't know what it is, but its still pretty. Thanks for clearing it up, Kim Rupert and others. Dani Haviland
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#1 of 1 posted
17 OCT 17 by
Prosopis
Saw Typhoo Tea in the early 80s at the Sugarhouse rose gardens near Salt Lake City, ostensibly the display gardens of the rose society there.
Completely overgrown with weeds, no care, no irrigation in that bone dry climate, but a group of Typhoo Tea stood upright, beautifully healthy while all the other beds around them were basically "dead". Deeply impressed by how floriferous, how thrifty, how fragrant that group of perhaps 4 TTs appeared that day very late in autumn. My first and last contact with this variety. Are they still there, I wonder?
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