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"Haynesville Pink Cluster" rose References
Book (2009) Page(s) 48. Malcolm M. Manners. The Hampton Park Noisette Study. "Haynesville Pink Cluster". Bud deep pink, almost red. Petals warm blush, fading white, yellowish base. 21 petals, plus 8 petaloids. Leaves glandular. Few prickles.
Book (2009) Page(s) 40. Includes photo(s). Gregg Lowery: "Haynesville Pink Cluster". Found in Louisiana, USA by Tommy Adams in 1988. Small flowered with loosely double blooms in airy clusters, "Haynesville Pink Cluster" makes a great arching mound and is more truly climbing in nature than most of the Champneys' types. The open blooms are an inch or less across, and the plant can achieve 10 feet or more in height and breadth. In Sebastopol, California, it is always in bloom. In a cool summer climate, it is very susceptible to 'powdery mildew. Perhaps one of the Noisettes that is most tolerant of shade, it will bloom as abundantly in shade as in full sun. Tommy Adams discovered this rose in Haynesville, Louisiana, while working for The Antique Rose Emporium, which reintroduced it in the late 1980s.
Newsletter (Aug 2001) Page(s) 3. Vol 26, No. 3. Rev. Douglas T. Seidel, Pennsylvania. Those fabulous Foundlings: the No-Name Noisettes. ....The blooms on three varieties, "Lingo", "Fewell's Noisette", and "Haynesville Pink Cluster" are practically identical: semi-double ivory or palest blush with two or three rows of petals, like faint editions of 'Champneys' Pink Cluster'. "Lingo"was found by a collector of that name in the late 1960s in north Florida and shared with the late Joseph F. Kern Nursery in Mentor, Ohio. The four foot plant was such a willing bloomer that Mr. Kern put it on the market for the next few years as the Charleston-raised 'Frazer's Pink Musk'. "Fewell's Noisette" and the "Haynesville" rose carry the same type of flower on climbing plants that will reach ten feet in my locale. "Fewell's" may have an edge over the others with huge clusters of buds and nice foliations on the sepals.
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