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lynnette_gw

Favourite rose breeder

lynnette
9 years ago

Do you find that as you become familiar with the different roses in your garden, a favourite hybridizer begins to appear? I seem to favour the newer Kordes roses, then I like Poulsen, Zary's hybrid teas and Boeners climbers.

Comments (23)

  • dublinbay z6 (KS)
    9 years ago

    Austin wins hands down in my garden, but I also like Kordes. Other than that, it is the beauty and/or health of the individual rose that usually catches my attention.

    Kate

  • seil zone 6b MI
    9 years ago

    Not so much for big roses. I like some from all the different major players. I also do really like Jim Sproul's work with the hulthemias. But I love most all of Frank Benardella's minis and minfloras! I already had about 10 or 12 of them but I lost them this winter so I'm starting over to collect them. However I generally just buy what ever I see that I like and is available. What lives stays and what doesn't goes and I look some more.

  • Lynn-in-TX-Z8b- Austin Area/Hill Country
    9 years ago

    I agree with Sara Ann in that my top performers come from certain breeders; Carruth, Meilland, Kordes, Tauntau. Certain David Austin roses perform well. I only own one Rupert, Annie Laurie McDowell. It was love at first sight. Thusfar it is a healthy, fairly vigorous grower.


    Lynn

  • wirosarian_z4b_WI
    9 years ago

    In my z4 area, these 3 rose breeders plants do well for me. Ping Lim (Easy Elegance roses), Dr. Buck (Iowa State roses) and Kordes roses.

  • bellarosa
    9 years ago

    Kordes, Medilland and Sveja (Canadian Explorer roses).

  • ArbutusOmnedo 10/24
    9 years ago

    It looks like the Nabonnand family's teas are meant for this area so far. Tom Carruth's roses do well here for the most part. I love Paul Barden's roses and so far the few I have are faring well. The latest Austins are doing pretty well here also. I can't speak on most of their health, but I am fond of Rev. Pemberton's roses on the whole. Vibert, Lacharme, Jean-Claude Ducher, Lambert, and Geschwind are also some of my favorites.

  • henry_kuska
    9 years ago

    Historically, Griffin Buck (Iowa State), Canadian Government Explorer and Parkland breeders, and Kordes.

    Present day, William Radler, Paul Barden, and Jim Sproul,

  • kentucky_rose zone 6
    9 years ago

    Carruth, Zary, Kordes, Clemons, Wells, & Benardella

  • bobbyb123
    9 years ago

    I am with Seil, not so much for the big rose breeders. My favorite rose breeder is Dee Bennett. She truly created some masterpieces, sadly, some were after her passing.
    My second favorite was Ralph Moore, because he created so many mini roses, also he had many firsts. such as, single minis, moss minis and striped minis, and probably a few others I cant think of at the moment.

  • bunnicula03
    9 years ago

    I also love Frank Benardella's roses, for the minis and minifloras. For the larger ones I'm all over the map with my favorites.

  • canadian_rose
    9 years ago

    My favorite breeder is Meilland. Wow!
    Carol

  • nastarana
    9 years ago

    I have an ongoing love affair with the roses of Mattias Tantau, Jr., even though they are challenging to grow in zone five. My 'Lapponia' just came back from the dead! Yay!

    My last, last, last, very last Vintage order included VID 'Showbiz' and 'Paprika'.

  • User
    9 years ago

    Legrice for his sheer audacity and ingenuity with colourwork., Lens .....the nearest breeding work to the species types Loving Hybrid Musks of all types,,,,,but mostly still having an enduring love affair with the species.
    Kordes roses are always vigorous and healthy....but a tad dull apart from the great Fruhling series.
    I love older Harkness roses for the innovative breeding....but unfortunately, they do need spray regimes.
    A midland trio of breeders - Chris Warner, Peter James and Frank Cowlishaw - some outstanding roses coming from this stable (Blue for You, Odyssey, Purple Skyliner, Bright as a Button, Eyes for You, Rhapsody in Blue

    Across the pond - I love some of the little Moore roses (Little Buckaroo, Mr.Bluebird) and am very interested in the (wide) range of Barden roses - but sadly, unavailable here.

    Finally, Pirjo Rautio has reinvigorated spinossissimas while Svedja has done the same with rugosas.

    However, if I could only choose one, it would have to be those grown by birds and small mammals - nothing to beat the wild roses.

  • Molineux
    9 years ago

    Tom Carruth & David Austin. Both men have produced what are IMHO the best yellow roses ever hybridized:

    JULIA CHILD & MOLINEUX.

  • nippstress - zone 5 Nebraska
    9 years ago

    I used to have a trio of favorite breeders that automatically raised a rose's attractiveness to me - Kordes, Tantau, Delbard. Then I added the American quartet - Barden, Rupert, Buck & Lim, and they've become the mainstay "workhorses" in many ways.

    I dearly love the Meilland roses, particularly the Romanticas, and I pine for many of the Poulsen roses, particularly the Renaissance series (especially my dearly departed Bella Renaissance). Of course Austin gets a special mention, not to mention relatively easy care and hardiness in my zone. I save a special fondness for the breeders of "weirdo" roses, notably Le Grice, McGredy, and Williams. And that doesn't even begin to touch all the turn of the century breeders of my hybrid Perpetuals and others that are one-rose wonders.

    If I have to pick a favorite breeder, I'll have to go with Kordes since so many of those roses do so very well in my zone, but the competition is stiff.

    Cynthia

  • mariannese
    9 years ago

    My most recent favourite breeder is Tantau, or rather Evers who breeds for the firm. I was given five newer roses to trial two years ago and four of them have been perfect in every respect. My older favourite is Rudolph Geschwind and I have a small collection of his hardy climbers, a difficult class in my climate.

  • diane_nj 6b/7a
    9 years ago

    Two of my early mentors, Frank Benardella and Betty Valentine Jolly. Wonderful, generous people who loved roses. David Clemons, for his beautiful minis.

  • reemcook
    9 years ago

    Mr. Kim Rupert: Roses are evergreen with little to no blackspot issues (or other diseases). Prolific blooms throughout the season.

    Kordes: Generally very healthy in the 8a (Pacific Northwest) climate.

  • nastarana
    9 years ago

    Francois Lacharme, for his magnificent Bourbon/Noisettes which, alas, I can't grow here.

    I can now add Jacobus, now that 'Morning Stars', 'Autumn Bouquet' and 'Dream Girl' are growing back; I thought I had lost them.

  • arlene_82 (zone 6 OH)
    8 years ago

    I am a beginning rose collector and the Austins are really drawing me in...they just seem to consistently capture my idea of what makes roses beautiful plants and flowers - whatever that idea is and it varies from person to person. Although, I started with 3 Mayflowers to line the fence along the sidewalk two years ago and they look just terrible and anemic now (even for toddler roses)...I was afraid the soil they were planted in was too sandy and need to heavily amend there.

  • nanadollZ7 SWIdaho
    8 years ago

    My favorite modern rose hybridizers are Hans Jurgen Evers (Tantau), David Austin, and Tom Carruth. Geschwind roses appeal to me, but I haven't grown them. Diane

  • braverichard (6a, North MO)
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    Very favorite has to be Radler, roses from all other breeders that are claimed to be "very disease resistant" still get some disease in my garden EXCEPT for Radler's creations. Even my apricot drift got blackspot in the fall this year - first time ever, shocking. And Kordes stuff gets some BS in my garden which was also shocking.

    Meanwhile, I have a lot of Radler's roses (knock out, red double knock out, pink double knock out, Milwaukee's Calatrava, Sunny knock out, Carefree Sunshine, Carefree Celebration, Peppermint Pop, Winner's Circle, Ramblin' Red, Cancan, Tahitian Treasure, Orchid Romance, rainbow knock out) and so far only rainbow KO gets some disease and that disease is mildew and only in the fall. Zero BS on Radler roses in my garden.

    My garden is all organic now so while I value beauty, disease resistance is getting really high on the priority list.