HelpMeFind Roses, Clematis and Peonies
Roses, Clematis and Peonies
and everything gardening related.
BookPlants ReferencedPhotosReviews & CommentsRatings 
Climbing Roses (Stevens, 1933)
(1933)  Page(s) 161.  
 
Auguste roussel. Barbier & Cie., 1913. Derived from R. macrophylla. A great shrub twelve to fifteen feet high, with clusters of big, semi-double, pink flowers.
(1933)  Page(s) 161.  
 
AURELIEN IGOULT. M. Igoult, 1924. Multiflora. Another of the many attempts to achieve a blue rose. The violet-tinted flowers have a reddish tone.
(1933)  Page(s) 161.  
 
Australian Beauty. Kerslake, 1911. Distinct dark red, fragrant hybrid Tea.
(1933)  Page(s) 161.  
 
'Aviateur Bleriot' Fauque & Fils, 1910. Few of the older Wichuraianas have won a stronger hold on popularity. The buds are coppery orange, the flowers saffron and gold, fading white. Foliage remarkably handsome. Needs protection north
(1933)  Page(s) 161.  
 
Babette. M. H. Walsh, 1906. Clusters of little, double, dark pink or crimson flowers, with paler edges. Nice, old-time Wichuraiana.
(1933)  Page(s) 161.  
 
Beacon Belle. R. & J. Farquhar, 1919. Reputed to be an Ayrshire hybrid with Polyantha blood. Flowers small, very double, pale pink, fading to white. Not unlike a cluster-flowered Wichuraiana in habit, but the foliage is thin and scrawny.
(1933)  Page(s) 182.  
 
'Gloire de Bordeaux'. Lartay, 1861. Another child of 'Gloire de Dijon'. with large, bright pink flowers silvered with white. Also known as Belle de Bordeaux, Elisa Sauvage' and 'Mme. William'.
(1933)  Page(s) 162.  
 
Belle Lyonnaise. Levet 1869. Old Tea with bright canary-yellow flowers, tinted with white and salmon.
(1933)  Page(s) 162.  
 
Belle of Portugal (Belle Portugoise). Lisbon Botanical Gardens, 1905. This is an authentic hybrid of R. gigantea, from which it inherits giant growth and superb foliage. Flowers light pink, semi-double, and larger than most. Glorious in California and ought to be planted extensively throughout the South.
(1933)  Page(s) 167.  
 
Cl. Betty. H. J. Hohman, 1926. An excellent sport of the bush Hybrid tea, with long, coppery buds and fluffy, pale pink flowers overspread with a golden sheen. One of the most continuous flowering climbers.
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