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Bulletin 224, Plant Introductions, Agriculture Experiment Station of South Dakota State College
 
(1927)  Page(s) 50.  
 
Amdo Rose - Introduced 1927. Pedigree: Tetonkaha x La Melusine. A heavy bloomer through July and into August. The pink flowers appear seven to ten in a cluster; about 16 petals and 8 petaloids. Its late blooming makes it of interest.
 
(1927)  Page(s) 50.  
 
Ekta Rose - Introduced 1927. Pedigree: Rosa gallica grandiflora x American Beauty. Of tall upright habit; very hardy and vigorous. Flowers, single, pink: blooming freely throughout June and a few days of July. Since the flowers are single, this plant may not be a hybrid. However, the flowers are pink, while the flowers of the Rosa gallica parent are dark crimson. Also, it blooms earlier than Rosa gallica. This plant sprouts freely. May be useful for screens, hedges, or as an ornamental shrub. Rosa gallica is a native of central Europe extending east to the Caucausus Mountains, has been cultivated "from time immemorial", and is regarded as one of the parents of the Hybrid Perpetuals. In the Island of Bourbon, France, it is customary to make hedges and palisades with the Bengal rose and Rosa gallica.
 
(1927)  Page(s) 51.  
 
Kitana Rose - Introduced 1927. Pedigree: Tetonkaha x Rose Apples, a Rugosa hybrid from England. A vigorous, hardy, semi-double pink rose, blooming very freely in June and into July. Flowers, 3 inches in diameter; intense fragrance; petals, about 36; petaloids, 25. Red fruit sets freely. Flowers are somewhat globular with little pollen; deep lavender pink.
 
(1927)  Page(s) 51.  
 
Koza Rose - Introduced 1927. Pedigree: Seed parent, our seedling of Rosa rugosa, Siberian form x La France; pollen parent, La Melusine, a rugosa hybrid. Vigorous plant, over 7 feet in height; a profuse bloomer. Flowers semi-double; deep pink; blooms freely through July and into August.
 
(1927)  Page(s) 51.  
 
Koza Rose - Introduced 1927. Pedigree: Seed parent, our seedling of Rosa rugosa, Siberian form x La France; pollen parent, La Melusine, a rugosa hybrid. Vigorous plant, over 7 feet in height; a profuse bloomer. Flowers semi-double; deep pink; blooms freely through July and into August.
 
(1927)  Page(s) 51.  
 
Minisa Rose. - Introduced 1927. Pedigree: Rosa rugosa, Siberian form x Prince Camille de Rohan, a well known Hybrid Perpetual, one of the darkest red of all roses. Minisa is not very double, having only about 17 petals and petaloids. Color, very deep crimson, rich fragrance; a free bloomer.
 
(1927)  Page(s) 51.  
 
Minisa Rose - Introduced 1927. Pedigree: Rosa rugosa Siberian form x Prince Camille de Rohan, a well known Hybrid Perpetual, one of the darkest red of all roses. Minisa is not very double, having only 17 petals and petaloids. Color, very deep crimson, rich fragrance; a free bloomer.
(1927)  Page(s) 51.  
 
Mrs. Mina Lindell Rose. Introduced 1927. A beautiful dwarf semi-double, light pink, wild rose found by Mrs. Mina Lindell in Butte, County, South Dakota. Mrs. Lindell, under date of March 4, 1924, wrote: "These roses grow on the west side of a hill and have noticed that there was a clump of single roses and then a clump of double ones near them. The roses grow about a mile from the Butte called Castle Rock in Butte County." Mrs. Lindell died in February, 1925. This rose is named in her memory by the surviving family. To find a double wild rose on the prairies of South Dakota is indeed noteworthy. The plant sprouts freely so it will not be necessary to bud, graft, or grow from cuttings.
 
(1927)  Page(s) 51.  
 
Okaga Rose - Introduced 1927. Pedigree: Rosa gallica grandiflora x Tetonkaha. A very fine semi-double rose. Flowers, deep pink; low bush; blooming very freely in June and first half of July.
 
(1927)  Page(s) 52.  
 
Semi Rose - Introduced 1927. A tall growing upright shrub, fully eight feet in height, with hooked prickles in pairs. Flowers, small, white, blooming all summer, followed by bright red fruits. This is Rosa laxa, Retz., grown from seed collected in 1913 on the dry steppes of Semi-palatinsk, Siberia. The plant may prove useful as a budding stock for other roses or for hedges and screens. An occasional bush has light pink flowers. This interesting wild rose has been described under many synonyms. The present name is given it to distinguish it from other importations. Native of the Altai region. It should not be confused with Rosa laxa, Lindl., which is a variety of Rosa blanda, Ait. The name, Semi, is an abbreviation of Semipalatinsk, where the seed was collected by N.E. Hansen in 1913.
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