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'Pink Double Knock Out ®' rose Description
Photo courtesy of songtaeyi
HMF Ratings:
34 favorite votes. Average rating:
EXCELLENT.
ARS:
Medium pink Shrub. Registration name: RADtkopinkExhibition name: Pink Double Knock Out ®
Bloom:
Deep pink, fuchsia / magenta shading, ages to darker . None to mild fragrance. 30 to 35 petals. Average diameter 3". Medium, full (26-40 petals), in small clusters bloom form. Blooms in flushes throughout the season. Medium, ovoid buds.
Habit:
Short, bushy, rounded, upright. Small, matte, dark green, dense, leathery foliage. 3 to 7 leaflets.
Height: 35" to 47" (90 to 120cm). Width: up to 39" (up to 100cm).
Growing:
USDA zone 4b and warmer. Can be used for beds and borders, cut flower, garden, hedge, landscape or shrub. Heat tolerant. Protect tender new spring growth from hard freezes that may cause canker, die-back and death of the plant. . Remove spent blooms to encourage re-bloom. Spring Pruning: Remove old canes and dead or diseased wood and cut back canes that cross. In warmer climates, cut back the remaining canes by about one-third. In colder areas, you'll probably find you'll have to prune a little more than that. Remove old canes and dead or diseased wood..
Patents:
Canada - Patent No: 3757 on 28 Jan 2010 Application No: 08-6391 on 23 Jun 2008 Breeder: Jason Brown, Elkton; Cockcroft Dave, Granby; Jerome Lavalee, Granby, all United States of America
'Radtkopink' originated from a naturally occurring, spontaneous mutation of the variety 'Radtko'. The new variety was discovered in 2004 within a group of 500 three year old rooted cuttings of the variety 'Radtko' that were propagated at Granby, Conneticut, United States in 2001. United States - Patent No: PP 18,507 on 19 Feb 2008 VIEW USPTO PATENTApplication No: 11/471,610 on 21 Jun 2006 Inventors: Cockcroft; David F. (Simsbury, CT), Lavallee; Jerome A. (Agawam, MA), Brown; Jason N. (Elkton, MD)
A single plant of the new variety was discovered at Granby, Conn., U.S.A. while growing among a group of 500 plants of the `Radtko` variety (U.S. Plant Pat. No. 16,202). The plant was approximately three years of age and have been asexually reproduced by the rooting of a cutting of the `Radtko` variety.... The description is based on the observation of two year-old specimens of the new variety during October while growing outdoors on their own roots near West Grove, Pa., U.S.A.
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