HelpMeFind Roses, Clematis and Peonies
Roses, Clematis and Peonies
and everything gardening related.
Member
Profile
PhotosFavoritesCommentsJournalMember
Listings
 
Antique Rose Emporium
most recent 9 JUN 22 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 9 JUN 22 by Antique Rose Emporium
Rose Listing Omission

Wicked Sister

Introduced by the Antique Rose Emporium 2022

5 x 5 ft shrub Zone 5-11 Repeat Mild Citrus Fragrance Pink Blend
A breakthrough in breeding, ‘Wicked Sister® is the devilishly more successful seedling of ‘Abraham Darby®.’ She possesses all of the old-garden charm with her quartered flower shape but has an iron-clad constitution when it comes to disease resistance. Goodness knows, we love this ‘Wicked Sister®!’

Blackspot Resistant, Powdery Mildew Resistant, Downy MIldew Resistant

(Florentina x Abraham Darby)

https://antiqueroseemporium.com/collections/all-roses/products/haute-couture
REPLY
Reply #1 of 1 posted 9 JUN 22 by Patricia Routley
Very good to see your name in the comments page. Should be more of it!
‘Wicked Sister’ added. Which Florentina please? There are four:
Florentina ® (climber, Kordes, 2002)
Florentina (floribunda, Leenders, 1938)
Florentina (hybrid tea, Kordes, 1973)
Florentina™ Arborose ®
REPLY
most recent 6 JAN 04 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 6 JAN 04 by Anonymous-797
On one of P. Allensmith's shows, he referenced a German Import Rose- "Funker" or "Funkier" a red rose. Can you assist me in locating this rose for purchase?
REPLY
Reply #1 of 1 posted 6 JAN 04 by Anonymous-2386
I am sorry, but we do not grow this rose. In the Combined Rose List, there is a listing for Funkuhr a yellow Hybrid Tea that was introduced in 1984. That rose is only available from overseas growers in India and Germany.
REPLY
most recent 27 OCT 03 SHOW ALL
 
Initial post 19 OCT 03 by Unregistered Guest
i'm looking for a hedge or shrub rose (pink ) that Spring Hill nursey used to sell. It had continuous bloom, grew to 4 ft, 3-4 ft spread. about 20 petals/ bloom. In looking at your list online the description " ...blooms again later in the season..." is somewhat difficult to interpret, does that indicate continuous bloom? or just a second blooming?
REPLY
Reply #1 of 1 posted 27 OCT 03 by Anonymous-2386
This is very difficult to answer as each rose blooms differently. Without knowing the rose we are talking about, a generality is any time there is new growth, you can expect rebloom.
REPLY
© 2024 HelpMeFind.com