Showing posts with label sweet brier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sweet brier. Show all posts

18 April 2010

Old Garden Roses - Rosa cinnamomea (the Whitsuntide Rose) and Rosa rubiginosa (the old Sweet Brier)

Chapter 2 (extract 3) of "Roses for English gardens" by Jekyll and Mawley (1902), in which Miss Jekyll discusses the Whitsuntide Rose, a beautiful American wild rose, as well as the old English favourite, the Sweet Brier.
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An old Rose that used to be in nearly every garden and is now but rarely seen is the Cinnamon Rose (R. cinnamomea), in some parts of the southern counties called the Whitsuntide Rose. The small flat flowers are pretty and have a distinct scent. It makes a neat bush of rather upright habit. An equally old garden Rose is R. lucida, an American species. It is fairly common in old gardens, forming rounded bushes, and will grow anywhere even in the poorest soils, where the autumn tinted foliage, bright yellow and crimson, and the quantities of flat-shaped scarlet hips are very ornamental. The flower is single and of a full pink colour. It seems to like slight shade, as it shrivels in full sun. There is a strong growing garden variety, much more free in habit than the type, but it does not make such neat bushes. It is remarkable that a Rose so well known should have no English name. The double form that has been long in English gardens, but has never become common, and whose merit is only now becoming recognised, is one of the loveliest of bush Roses. It has the pretty old name Rose d'Amour.

How this Rose of American origin first came to be a plant of old English gardens is a question that I must leave to be answered by the botanist-antiquary; what chiefly concerns us is that it is one of the most delightful things in the garden.

The Scotch Briers are considered in the chapter on Brier Roses, and the newer Sweet Briers in that of New Garden Roses, though the old pink single Sweet Brier is, of course, in place here. Many are the ways in which it can be used. Planted in a double row and judiciously pruned, it makes a capital and most fragrant hedge from four to six feet high ; but it is perhaps prettiest planted among shrubs, with its graceful arching stems shooting up through them, or in bushy brakes either by itself or among Thorn bushes in one of the regions where the garden joins wilder ground. It will also assume quite a climbing habit if it is led into some tree like a Holly, or encouraged to scramble through straggling Black or White Thorn of tallish growth in some old hedge.
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See also:
Old Garden Rose - The cabbage or Provence Rose (Rosa centifolia) and the Provins rose (Rosa gallica)
Old Garden Roses - The damask rose
Old Garden Roses - Rosa alba
Old Garden Roses - Rosa alpina and Rosa arvensis
Old Garden Roses - the Banksian Roses and the China Roses
Old Garden Roses - Fortune's Yellow and certain other old roses
A list of the best Old Garden Roses

17 April 2010

Sweet Briars (Rosa rubiginosa) and the Penzance hybrids

Chapter 1 (extract 8) of "Roses for English Gardens" by Jekyll and Mawley (1902), in which Miss Jekyll pays tribute to the work of Lord Penzance in creating the Penzance hybrids of sweet brier.
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The work of the late Lord Penzance among the Sweet Briers has given us a whole range of garden Roses of inestimable value. He sought to give colour and size by means of the pollen parent, and so obtained strong as well as tender colouring and also increased size, while retaining the scented leaf and the free character of growth. It seems as though this eminent lawyer, who in some of the years of his mature practice had to put the law in effect in decreeing the separation of unhappy human couples, had sought mental refreshment in the leisure of his latest days by devoting it to the happy marriages of Roses. Though his name will ever stand high in the records of legal practice, it is doubtful whether in years to come it will not be even more widely known in connection with the Roses he has left us, the fruits of the recreation of his last years of failing strength.
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LIST: Sweet Brier (R. rubiginosa)—
  • Common, pink.
  • Double, red.
  • Janet's Pride; half-double, striped.

Penzance Hybrids of Sweet Brier, Selection
  • Green Mantle; pink.
  • Anne of Geierstein; rose.
  • Rose Bradwardine; rose.
  • Meg Merrilees; rose.
  • Lady Penzance; copper.
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See also:
New Roses of the late Victorian era
Turner's Crimson rambler
Multiflora roses
Dwarf polyantha roses (Pompom roses)
The wichuriana roses (Rosa wichuriana hybrids)
The rugosa roses (Rosa rugosa)
Some new tea roses and species roses for gardens