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'Thérèse Bugnet' rose References
Book  (1992)  Page(s) 323.  
 
Description. Flowers: pink, double, 4-inch, fragrant... leaves may be prone to mildew...
Book  (1991)  Page(s) 89.  
 
Georges Bugnet (Canada). Description. Unusual hardiness... large and intensely fragrant blossoms... repeats
Book  (1988)  Page(s) 244 & 245.  Includes photo(s).
 
Rugosa Hybrid. Bugnet (USA) 1950. Description. Flowers: fully double, with muddled centre petals, large, deep rose-pink...
Book  (Dec 1985)  Page(s) 248.  
 
Bugnet (Canada) 1950. (R. acicularis x R. x kamtchatica) x (R. amblyotis x R. rugosa plena) x 'Betty Bland'. A very hardy rose. Description. Flowers: large, double, clear red paling to pink. R. rugosa influence not immediately recognizable.
Website/Catalog  (1985)  Page(s) 47.  
 
Therese Bugnet* (Hybrid Rugosa). Very hardy.  The product of a very unusual cross with Rosa rugosa, Rosa acicularis and Rosa amblyotis. Double flowers of clear red paling to pink.  Good healthy foliage.  1950.  P. H. Shade tolerant.  (C) 8 x. 6’.
Website/Catalog  (1985)  Page(s) 18.  
 
Thérèse Bugnet, rose soutenu, refleuri
Website/Catalog  (1984)  Page(s) 20.  
 
THÉRÈSE BUGNET. Des fleurs romantiques, rose fuchsia, au parfum prononcé. Ce rosier fleurit modérément, mais de façon continue, et se recommande pour les résidences secondaires : résistant aux plus grands froids, il forme rapidement de magnifiques haies qui ne demandent aucun entretien et remplacent avantageusement troènes ou charmilles. Hauteur : 130/150 cm.
Book  (1983)  Page(s) 135.  Includes photo(s).
 
A very hardy shrub rose to 2 metres. Flowers repeatedly with 100 mm pale lilac-pink double flowers which have a good scent.
Book  (1967)  Page(s) 45.  
 
Some All-Canadian Roses
by Fred Blakeney, Victoria, B.C.
Mr. Georges Bugnet of Legal, Alberta, began hybridizing roses over 25 years ago. As a matter of fact, he wrote an article about his work on breeding roses which appeared in the American Rose Society's Annual for 1941. A good deal of his biography is in West of the Fifth, published by the Lac Ste. Anne Historical Society. 
His breeding grounds at Rich Valley have been acquired by the Alberta Government, and bear the name of "The Bugnet Plantation Historical Site". He has two registered roses to his credit:
"Thérèse Bugnet", shrub, introduced in 1950, is the progeny of four species and "Betty Bland": i.e., (R. acicularisR. rugosa kamtchatica) x (R. amblyotis x R. rugosa plena) x "Betty Bland". The flowers are large (4 inches), double (30-40 petals), and open a fragrant red passing to pale pink. The plant is very vigorous, and new shoots reach 5-6 feet in three months. It blooms on old wood from mid-June till frost. Very hardy.
Article (misc)  (1950)  
 
Personal Correspondence: Early 1950's, Georges Bugnet to Percy Wright, Percy Wright fonds,

I will send you my most satisfactory child. Thérese Bugnet. A lady in Calgary, wrote me that she pulled out all other roses under her parlor windows to replace them by Thérese B. The parentage is: Lac la Nonne x R. amblyotis (a single red rose from Siberia) - recrossed again with R. rugosa fl. pl. - and another cross with pollen of Betty Bland. You can easily mutiply it by cuttings and layering. I does not sucker at all - at least in my clay soil. And you have my permission to sell it. Being now past 71 I am quite free from money-making ambitions. By using it as mother parent (or pollen parent? I've not tried this) you have a chance of better progeny. The everblooming quality is very prominent, beginning some years before the natives, until frost.
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