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Indian Rose Annual
(2015)  Page(s) 178, 180(photo).  Includes photo(s).
 
[From Roses in Laos and China", by Prof. Yoshihiro Ueda, pp. 173-180]
Around the Xien Khuang are, we observed not only the same shrubs with small red flowers seen in Bolovens Plateau, but also 'Old Blush'.
(2015)  Page(s) 193, 195(photo).  Includes photo(s).
 
 [From Bitter Sweet.... But Loverly Roses in my Garden", by Mariam Ahmad (Merille A. Ghazali), pp. 190-195 on Roses in Malaysia]
...Putih Kampung....The white kampong rose...it is medium in size and blooms in flushes...Not much is known about her heritage. The bloom is lightly scented. Not many plants found in the country.
(2016)  Page(s) 6.  Includes photo(s).
 
[From "Some Roses in My Garden", By Helga Brichet, pp. 5-7]
...a tiny China, "Rajakkad", the name of an estate nearby, which refers to the building, formerly a Maharaja of Kerala' hunting lodge that was transported intact ....The semi-double blooms open off-white (rare among Chinas) and, as some six days pass, gradually deepen in hue to become deep pink...
(2015)  Page(s) 82, 84(photo).  Includes photo(s).
 
[From "Roses Explorers from Italy", by Helga Brichet, pp. 79-84, on Vittorio and Isabella Ducrot's rose explorations in Asia]
The second purely rose trip, in 1994, was planned along part of the Silk Route from Urumchi....The Valley of Gulmit has wonderful landscapes of glaciers and many thorny bushes with pink flowers of varying shades with small, 7-8 leaflets, and brown branches. Here ...was the amazing discovery of thick bushes of semi-double, red roses with a scent of the R. foetida, growing amongst hedges of the R. foetida Persiana.
(2015)  Page(s) 63-64.  
 
[From "Roses in Pakistan", by Dr. Mahmooda Hashmi, pp. 55-68]
Rosa Odorata Pakistana, as the name points out originated in Pakistan. The flowers are pink small but double and fragrant. Some people trace its origin in China, but since it grows wild in Swat, Buner & Chitral it could without hesitation be considered as indigenous to these areas...
(2015)  Page(s) 178, 180(photo).  Includes photo(s).
 
[From Roses in Laos and China", by Prof. Yoshihiro Ueda, pp. 173-180]
We found one species rose in an area opened by road construction in Bolovens Plateau. The plant was a large shrub with many white flowers emitting a musk-like fragrance. I think that the rose is R. tunquinensis, which is one of the species distributed in the southernmost part of south-east Asia.
(2015)  Page(s) 91-92, 95(photo).  Includes photo(s).
 
[From "Roses in Singapore", by Tuan Ching, pp. 90-95]
p. 91-92: ...Another naturalized rose is a pink OGR very similar to'Rose Edouard', the Bourbon widely cultivated in India.

p. 95: Pink "village" OGR that thrives in the heat, similar to the Bourbon Rose Edouard, commonly called the "Damask", due to its strong scent.
(2015)  Page(s) 194, 195(photo).  Includes photo(s).
 
[From Bitter Sweet.... But Loverly Roses in my Garden", by Mariam Ahmad (Merille A. Ghazali), pp. 190-195 on Roses in Malaysia]
p. 194: ...I am still unable to identufy the true identity and origin of a beautiful rose that the locals call Sempurna (Perfect), a rose which is also referred to as 'old rose'. 
p. 195: Malaysians call her "SEMPURNA" which means perfect.....yes she is perfect...beautiful dark pink bloom with lovely scent. Shie is almost thornless and her foliage is dark green and pointed. Recently someone told me her ID could be Mme dEnfert ...I checked the features, I think it could be correct. This rose also looks very much like Mary Rose...except for the fact that Mary blooms in clusters while Sempurna blooms singly.
(2016)  Page(s) 5.  Includes photo(s).
 
[From "Some Roses in My Garden", By Helga Brichet, pp. 5-7]
...Barabara and Peter Knox Shaw in Elgin, close to Cape Town ....On a trip ro South Western China some years ago, they ran across a delightful little China which they named *Sichuan Perpetual". The buds are long and pointed, the semi-double flowrrs have slightly twisted or lilting petals that start in various shades of pink and, after five or six days become a clear, very, but very, dark red. The plant is indeed amazingly floriferous. Unusually for a China, the leaflets are glossy.
 
(2016)  Page(s) 6.  Includes photo(s).
 
[From "Some Roses in My Garden", By Helga Brichet, pp. 5-7]
Spot On.... could be mistaken for an ever-blooming, bush form of the species....
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