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Discussion id : 166-898
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Initial post yesterday by Patricia Routley
Who was the breeder - Hansen or Whitman Cross? See references.
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Reply #1 of 2 posted yesterday by jedmar
Neils Hansen was the gardener of Whitman Cross in Chevy Chase. It seems that this rose was registered from the beginning as a cultivar of Hansen.
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Reply #2 of 2 posted yesterday by Patricia Routley
Thanks Jedmar.
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Discussion id : 166-894
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Initial post 2 days ago by eihblin
I have a rose that was called "Robusta" bourbon, and it is very definitely purple-red, never pink.
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Discussion id : 166-893
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Initial post 2 days ago by Clairose
Can anyone advise if this rose is available in Australia please ?
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Reply #1 of 1 posted 2 days ago by Margaret Furness
No gardens or sellers listed, no photos. Not all nurseries list their plants on helpmefind, but I don't think you'll find it.
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Discussion id : 133-685
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Initial post 9 JUL 22 by mmanners
If GoldenAge is still active here, I'll apologize -- answering their query only nine years later! Our 'Maréchal Niel' came to us from Greg Grant, in Texas. Details of his finding it can be found on pp. 114-115 of the book "The Rose Rustlers" by Greg Grant and William C. Welch. 2017. To summarize, Dr. Bill Welch discovered it in the back garden of a home in Bryan, Texas. Greg sent it to me. We tested it for the viruses causing rose mosaic disease shortly after receiving it, and it was not infected. It has since been tested by PCR and remains free of all known rose viruses.

We graft nearly all of our roses on 'Fortuniana' rootstock, and that's what I did with this rose. The result was easily the most vigorous rose I've ever grown, quickly climbing to the top of a 16 ft (3 meter) structure. The description here says it occasionaly repeats, but for us, it is seldom without at least a few flowers.

It deeply resents pruning, and I have killed a plant of it simply by pruning one back toward the top of an 8-foot (2.44 m) trellis.

While I often chip bud roses, I find this one very difficult to bud -- most of the buds die. However, it is extremely easy to cleft graft, so that's how we propagate it (with leaves, under mist).

I'm posting photos today, of our plants.
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Reply #1 of 2 posted 9 JUL 22 by Robert Neil Rippetoe
That's a stunner Malcolm.
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Reply #2 of 2 posted yesterday by Peter Egeto
Very interesting and looks fabulous on the photos.
Do you have experience with the same clone grafted to a different rootstock, or grown as own root? Would it repeat just as readily that way?

Thank you,
Peter
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