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ParisRoseLady
most recent 25 NOV HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 25 NOV by ParisRoseLady
Available from - Heirloom Roses
www.heirloomroses.com
REPLY
most recent 25 NOV HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 25 NOV by ParisRoseLady
Available from - Heirloom Roses
www.heirloomroses.com
REPLY
most recent 24 NOV HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 22 NOV by David G
The Peony variety ‘Felix Supreme’ first appeared in 1955 the catalogue of the Cottage Gardens Nursery in Lansing, Michigan. The nursery was owned by Nicolaas Isaac Willem Kriek, who was born in 1895. However it is unlikely that he actually created this peony, even though it is registered to his name. This is because in 1928 a man from Boskoop, The Netherlands, joined his company. Born in 1877, Abraham Nieuwenhuyzen was already an important breeder of peonies in Holland, before coming to America in 1921, where he changed his name to Newhouse. Abraham had won several important medals and prizes for a red peony called ‘Dr H. van der Tak’, back in Holland. In fact, he also won a prize at the America National Peony Show in 1923 for the ‘finest crimson’ with another of his plants, ‘Mr. L. Van Leeuwen’. his introduction, He started working for Kriek in 1928, and died in Lansing in 1957. He has peonies registered at the American Peony Society under both 'Nieuwenhuyzen' and 'Newhouse'.
As for Kriek, he began his life in America as a representative for a Dutch bulb company, and in 1923 started Cottage Gardens Nursery. In 1930 he designed and built a garden in Lansing for Richard H. Scott, President of Reo Motor Car Company. Scott had sold him the land for the nursery. The garden is still in existence, and considered a high-point in that period of American garden design. The nursery still exists today, and is still in the Kriek family.
Although the family claim Kriek introduced the 'Spartan' juniper in the 1950s, that seems unlikely, as the name 'Spartan' seems to have been given to this plant when introduced in 1961 by Monrovia Nurseries, who re-named a plant called 'Helle' they re-obtained from Denmark, where they had a sent a seedling of Juniperus chinensis around 1950.
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Reply #1 of 5 posted 23 NOV by ParisRoseLady
It seems like this post should be in the Peony Forum, not the rose forum!
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Reply #2 of 5 posted 23 NOV by Margaret Furness
Helpmefind is a broad church - roses, peonies, clematis... But not pets.
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Reply #4 of 5 posted 24 NOV by ParisRoseLady
Margaret, "But not pets", LOLOLOL!
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Reply #3 of 5 posted 23 NOV by jedmar
Please also check HMF's peony and clematis listings.
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Reply #5 of 5 posted 24 NOV by ParisRoseLady
Thank you Jedmar, I have grown a number of clematis over the years, and love them in general, but for me, there is nothing like the Queen of Flowers!
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most recent 23 NOV HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 21 NOV by David G
It seems your comments are not functioning? I tried to post a comment on the profile of NIW Kriek, but it wouldn't take it.
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Reply #1 of 4 posted 21 NOV by jedmar
But this comment is there
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Reply #2 of 4 posted 22 NOV by David G
Thanks for the advice. Probably me just being stupid! New systems always take a bit of adjusting too.
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Reply #3 of 4 posted 23 NOV by ParisRoseLady
It seems like this post should be in the Peony Forum, not the rose forum!
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Reply #4 of 4 posted 23 NOV by jedmar
HMF also lists peonies and clematis. The Q&A is open to all three plant types.
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