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'Rosa minutifolia f. minutifolia' rose Photos
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July 14, 2023 Santa Maria, CA
Uploaded 14 JUL 23 |
Santa Maria, CA November 2, 2020 Minutifolia continues flowering in this climate as long as there is water. It may rest a while during the height of summer "heat", but once the worst of the temps subside, the flowers begin pushing all over the plants. This is the UC Berkeley selection of the Mexican form.
Uploaded 2 NOV 20 |
Santa Maria, CA November 2, 2020 Minutifolia continues flowering in this climate as long as there is water. It may rest a while during the height of summer "heat", but once the worst of the temps subside, the flowers begin pushing all over the plants. This is the UC Berkeley selection of the Mexican form.
Uploaded 2 NOV 20 |
From "The Complete Book of Roses", Krüssmann, 1981, p. 294, Fig. 159: Comparison of R. stellata, R. stellata var. mirifica and R. minutifolia
Uploaded 22 OCT 18 |
Santa Maria, CA November 2, 2020 Minutifolia continues flowering in this climate as long as there is water. It may rest a while during the height of summer "heat", but once the worst of the temps subside, the flowers begin pushing all over the plants. This is the UC Berkeley selection of the Mexican form.
Uploaded 2 NOV 20 |
A field of R. minutifolia on March 24, 2017 at the Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden in Claremont, CA. Plant material from Baja California. Bees were heavily working the flowers--even trying to push/tear in flowers not fully open. The biggest rose bush had hundreds of flowers open and also already had hundreds of hips forming. I leaned over to smell one of the flowers and was surprised not at the lack of fragrance in the bloom but that the leaves at the tip of the cane smelled like pine/citrus.
Uploaded 24 MAR 17 |
Santa Maria, CA November 2, 2020 Minutifolia continues flowering in this climate as long as there is water. It may rest a while during the height of summer "heat", but once the worst of the temps subside, the flowers begin pushing all over the plants. This is the UC Berkeley selection of the Mexican form.
Uploaded 2 NOV 20 |
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Pink Suncrest clone in foreground with white 'Pure Bea' growing behind it. The flowers are about the same size, but the leaves on Pure Bea seem slightly larger. I'm waiting for new growth to compare and see whether the differences are phenotypic or cultural. Photographed in my Sonoma County garden on November 14, 2016. ~Benaminh
1 favorite vote.
Uploaded 26 JAN 17 |
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