|
'The Sacramento Rose' References
Website/Catalog (2018) Rosa stellata Wooton subsp. mirifica (Greene) W. H. Lewis, Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 52: 111. 1965. Wonderful rose Rosa mirifica Greene, Leafl. Bot. Observ. Crit. 2: 62. 1910; Hesperhodos mirificus (Greene) Cockerell; R. stellata var. mirifica (Greene) Cockerell; R. vernonii Greene Description
Article (magazine) (2009) Page(s) 31. R. stellata mirifica Greene Source Loubert Chromosome Number 14
Website/Catalog (2009) Page(s) 1. Includes photo(s). This online database has nice images of Rosa stellata subsp. mirifica, as photographed in Texas. http://aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu/ornamentals/nativeshrubs/rosastella.htm
Website/Catalog (2008) Check the New York Botanical Garden website for two outstanding large, pressed specimens of Rosa stellata subspecies mirifica. (Greene) W.H. Lewis.
Magazine (2001) Page(s) 22. Vol 95, Part 1. Peter Harkness. Favourite Singles. Rosa stellata mirifica Species shrub in UK 1917. This grows wild in New Mexico yet adapts perfectly to my Hertfordshire clay, producing golden-eyed deep rosy purple blooms over several weeks of summer. It is a distinctive type of rose, and among its fascinations are leaflets which are deep cut like those of strawberries, needle-like prickles, and wiry stems. It is a rather untidy grower but does not mind being trimmed back, and deserves to be better known.
Website/Catalog (Jun 1998) Page(s) 52. R. stellata mirifica ('Sacramento Rose') A thicket-like bush, with greyish leaves and cistus-like flowers. Brownish hips.
Book (1995) Page(s) 171. Includes photo(s).
Book (Apr 1993) Page(s) 513. R. stellata mirifica (Greene) Cockerell, Species, mauve, (R. mirifica Greene; 'The Gooseberry Rose'); 1916. Description.
Book (1993) Page(s) 66. Includes photo(s). [Listed under "Wild Roses and Their Cultivars"] ('Sacramento Rose', Rosa stellata var. myrifica (sic)). Needs a dry, hot place to grow and flower well. Found in the Sacramento and White Moutnains in New Mexico. Flowers from midsummer to autumn. Height: 7 ft in the wild, shorter in gardens.
Book (May 1992) Page(s) 121. R. stellata 'Mirifica' ('The Sacramento Rose') Species. Greene (USA) 1916... lilac-pink, with prominent stamens...
|