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'Souvenir de Philémon Cochet' rose Reviews & Comments
Discussion id : 105-136
most recent 30 MAY 18 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 28 AUG 17 by Andrew from Dolton
'Souvenir de Philémon Cochet' or 'Blanc Double de Coubert'?
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Reply #1 of 15 posted 28 AUG 17 by Patricia Routley
If it is highly fragrant, then 'Blanc Double de Coubert'. If not then it is more likely to be 'Souvenir de Philémon Cochet' (from which I can get no perfume).

I suspect there is world-wide confusion on 'Blanc Double de Coubert'. Because of its reputation for fragrance, we would all like to have it and nurseries may have sold another rose in its place. The references lurch from large hips, small hips, to no hips. The height varies as well, not to mention the parentage. (I note that Kamchatika is said to set a lot of hips.)

I am guessing, repeat guessing, that the parentage may have involved kamchatika; it sets no hips; is low; and has a perfume to knock your socks off. (It will be too low for your nose!)
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Reply #2 of 15 posted 28 FEB 18 by Andrew from Dolton
Thank you Patricia,
I have been pondering a reply. My plant is highly scented and constantly repeats like 'B D de C' it and has hips which according to Suzanne Verrier 'S de P C' does not produce. However, my plant is 11 years old and has made a spectacular rounded bush 2m X 3m but has not produced a single sucker although being on its own roots. There is almost no deadwood on it despite never being pruned.
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Reply #3 of 15 posted 28 FEB 18 by Jay-Jay
Blanc Double de Coubert suckered like mad in the past for me, but that was on a peaty/sandy soil.
Fragrance is "umwerfend" like the Germans would say. (knocks You over)
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Reply #4 of 15 posted 28 FEB 18 by Andrew from Dolton
That is interesting Jay-Jay because I'm still not convinced that it is 100% 'B D de C', but the fragrance certainly is "verbluffend". Its one fault is that there is seldom a flower that does not have some brown petal or part of a petal otherwise from a distance it is beautiful.
It was -10 last night and snow is predicted for today and tomorrow.
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Reply #5 of 15 posted 28 FEB 18 by Jay-Jay
In our and a friends' garden the flowers were of the purest white... no brown petals.
In fact I got that rose from those friends as suckers. They boasted about the astonishing fragrance. The rose surrounded their house and driveway and in the summer whilst sitting outside and enjoying a self-cooked Indonesian meal, we were surrounded by that BDdC scent and the sound of clocking and picking Brahma-chickens accompanied by their impressive rooster.
Over here right now, it's snow-white with a blazing wind (it was sunny this morning, but now cloudy) and a temp below -7°C. Tonight we'll get -10 too.
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Reply #6 of 15 posted 28 FEB 18 by Andrew from Dolton
It's very pale pink in bud then pure white and like your friends' very scented pure white but with some brown bits when the flowers are fully open. By-the-way I am rather envious of your Indonesian meal. My father worked for a Dutch based company and my parents' best friends were a Dutch/Indonesian couple who used to cook really delicious food. Many of their friends were Dutch, I grew-up on drop and hagel slag!
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Reply #7 of 15 posted 2 MAY 18 by HubertG
I don't grow it now, but I remember my BDdC (which didn't set hips) had rather bright almost light green foliage that complimented the flowers beautifully. Beautiful scent too.
Your photo shows rather darker foliage - maybe the difference is cultural, or even photographic - but I don't remember mine being quite that dark green. I don't remember mine having regular brown marks on the petals either.
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Reply #8 of 15 posted 2 MAY 18 by Andrew from Dolton
The picture was taken in the evening but the colours are a fairly true representation.
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Reply #9 of 15 posted 2 MAY 18 by HubertG
Do you think it could be R. rugosa alba plena?
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Reply #10 of 15 posted 3 MAY 18 by Andrew from Dolton
I've never heard of that rose before and yes I think you're right that is my rose.
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Reply #11 of 15 posted 3 MAY 18 by HubertG
It could explain why it sets lots of hips.
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Reply #12 of 15 posted 3 MAY 18 by Margaret Furness
Early on in my time with heritage roses, I learnt the abbreviation WIHHA - what I have here as.
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Reply #13 of 15 posted 26 MAY 18 by Andrew from Dolton
Even when the weather has been perfect it is difficult to find a flower without brown bits on it somewhere.
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Reply #14 of 15 posted 26 MAY 18 by HubertG
Do you think that is an inherent fault of the variety, or do you think it could be damage from something like thrips or something else?
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Reply #15 of 15 posted 30 MAY 18 by Andrew from Dolton
I think it could be a bit of a fault, I have never seen much thrip in the garden or pollen beetles, or maybe because the climate here is cool and wet although this year so far it has been warm and dry. I've posted a picture of the rose. It is twelve years old has never suckered or been pruned and has very little dead wood.
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