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Rose Gardens of Australia
(1997)  Page(s) 97.  
 
Roses do not play the major role at Cruden Farm, although I noticed the Alister Clark roses ‘Doris Downes’ and ..... in fine shape ...... But ‘Doris Downes’ is a good substitute. A clear pink highly scented climbing Hybrid tea rose, she blooms early in the spring and is a joy to behold. Unfortunately she turns on this performance only once a year.
(1997)  Page(s) 178.  Includes photo(s).
 
One of the three rose gardens at Carrick Hill outside Adelaide, is devoted to Alister Clark roses ‘Editor Stewart’ named by Alister Clark for an editor of the Australian Rose Annual, is a glowing red semi-double pillar rose.
(1997)  
 
p14. I once grew it (Veilchenblau) in company with Alister Clark’s pale creamy yellow R. gigantea hybrid ‘Golden Vision’. This combination was such a delight……

p236 Roses for growing up trees: Golden Vision. Alister Clark rose. Pale yellow, double fragrant. 10 x 3 m Flowers in spring.
(1997)  Page(s) 100.  
 
Reithmuller left us other shrub roses ideally suited to our climate and conditions: the pale pink single ‘Carabella’..... paler, almost creamy-coloured ‘Honeyflow’, less vigorous but also thornless and perpetual flowering.
(1997)  
 
p73 ….and the deeper pink, some might say almost blowzy ‘Kitty Kininmonth’.

p190 The Alister Clark roses do equally well. ‘Nancy Hayward’ and the bright pink, exuberant ‘Kitty Kininmonth’, described in Modern Roses as having R. gigantea in its breeding but exhibiting little sign of it, bloom all year round in this climate as Alister hoped they would.
 
(1997)  Page(s) 100.  
 
Reithmuller left us other shrub roses ideally suited to our climate and conditions: ‘Kwinana’, a vivid bright red single....
(1997)  Page(s) 48.  
 
A little plant of the newly released ‘Lily Freeman’ has made a good start in life and promises to be a worthwhile addition to the garden. The Rugosas seed freely, particularly ‘Scabrosa’, R. rugosa ‘Alba’ and ‘Fru Dagmar Hastrup’. ‘Lily Freeman is a seedling from the Rugosa hybrid ‘Schneezwerg’, found in the garden of Ian Huxley at Guildford in central Victoria. She has the Rugosa foliage and the growth habit of her parent. But where ‘Schneezwerg’ bears smallish white semi-double blooms, the flowers of ‘Lily Freeman’ are single and of a soft mauve-pink. She flowers right through summer and produces a good crop of small red hips. Like her parent she should make a good dense hedge.
(1997)  Includes photo(s).
 
p73 ....the mid-pink, very recurrent ‘Margaret Turnbull’.....

p180 distance picture. ‘Margaret Turnbull’

p181 ....Milkmaid....Flying Colours....Cicely Lascelles.... And the more restrained ‘Margaret Turnbull’.
(1997)  Page(s) 97.  
 
Roses do not play the major role at Cruden Farm, although I noticed the Alister Clark roses ‘Doris Downes’ and ‘Daydream’ in fine shape. The deep red ‘Marie Greene’ named after Dame Elisabeth’s sister seems unfortunately to have vanished without trace.
(1997)  Page(s) 57.  
 
{At] Bindara, Victoria. Beneath the grey of the olives the vivid pink Alister Clark rose ‘Marjory Palmer’ positively glows in the afternoon sunshine. Although she is not one of the hybrids of R. gigantea for which Clark is famed, she bears large clusters of fragrant blooms almost continuously.
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