 |

|
 |
301
Champneys’ Pink Cluster
Noisette
1811
After being lost to commerce for many years, this earliest Noisette was re-identified from a plant sent to the Huntington Botanical Gardens of California in the early 1970’s. The clusters of small, light pink, double flowers carry one of the sweetest perfumes in the rose world. Our plant puts up vigorous shoots with narrow, graceful leaves that are occasionally susceptible to blackspot. It makes a handsome, rather mounding shrub, or it can be displayed on a pillar, fence or trellis. Any garden would be enriched by the beauty, scent and history of this rare old Southern antique.
4 to 8 feet Z6-9 R Fr lp
|
 |