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| I started a rose bed last fall, and I put Belinda's Dream in the center, with Francis Dubreuil/Barcelona on one side and Souvenir de la Malmaison on the other side, with plans to put Kronprincessin Victoria (sp?) beyond Souvenir de la Malmaison. The rose that I put in the other side of Francis Dubreuil/Barcelona isn't making it, and I'm trying to decide what to replace it with. My original plan was a deeper pink than BD and SDLM, on the cool side, but now I'm considering maybe an apricot rose. There's not really a limit on how tall the rose gets, but it could only get 4 feet (maybe 5 feet at most) wide. Besides FD/B, this rose would also be beside some Agastache Blue Boa and some perovskia. I'd appreciate any suggestions for what would look good there (particular roses, or just color schemes). |
Follow-Up Postings:
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| Have you considered something soft-yellow? I planted the clematis 'Niobe' next to the rose 'Yellow Sweetheart, Climbing' and love how the velvety dark red plays against the pale yellow. This pic isn't the best, but it gives you an idea. I'm considering trying some smaller pale yellow or near-white Teas in barrels next year, thinking they'd go nicely next to my barrels containing dark red and crimson Hybrid Teas (and annual fillers and spillers). I made myself a little list of possibilities, and among them are some which might work for you: 'Alexander Hill Gray' (possibly aka "Soncy") I tried the "apricot next to dark red" thing when I put 'Golden Buddha' next to 'Prospero' and I have to say that I wasn't too thrilled about how they looked when they bloomed together, until 'Golden Buddha' faded a little. Rather than move the roses, I put a blue-flowered geranium and a leftover dusty miller in the space between them, which muted the clash. And I made a mental note to find something white to put there next year. If you have roses in the potential color you're thinking about, see how they look together in a bouquet. :-) ~Christopher |
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| I had a similar thought, that apricot wouldn't really be very compatible with the other colors. I think a darker pink would look very nice, as would white, cream or a pale yellow. I feel that too much contrast would take away from the harmony of the composition and confuse the eye. Ingrid |
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- Posted by plantloverkat 9a north Houston (My Page) on Sun, Jul 13, 14 at 15:12
| Personally, I like apricot next to red. When I lived in the Dallas area, I planted Mrs. Oakley Fisher next to Madame Antoine Rebe, and I loved that combination. Some apricots can play tug of war between orange and pink, depending upon the temperatures, so I agree that not all apricots would look good with dark red. If you like the idea of pale yellow, I can heartily recommend Lady Pamela Carol, one of ARE's Pioneer roses. I tried several yellow roses before I bought this one, and I found some yellows to be too harsh looking with my other roses. Lady Pamela Carol is a lovely (to my eyes) soft yellow and looks nice with all the roses around it. It blooms regularly for me, is healthy, fragrant and heat tolerant, and it will also produce big orange hips, if you like those. It is my favorite of all of the Pioneer roses. |
Here is a link that might be useful: Lady Pamela Carol on HMFRoses
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| Hmm, such glorious indecision! So much opportunity to click through rose websites! I had given some thought to cream, but not pale, soft yellow. I'm looking forward to checking out the above suggestions. I still think that the right shade of soft apricot (on the cream/pink side, not the gold/orange side) could work. When I emailed ARE asking for fragrant apricot roses, Mike Shoup suggested Abraham Darby, Star of the Republic, or Perle d'Or. Any thoughts about those? Or maybe Arethusa, Anson Jones, Jude the Obscure, or Tamora? I'd also love ideas for pink roses (I know, there are no shortage of pink roses, but something that would be a distinct shade of pink compared to Belinda's Dream and Souvenir de la Malmaison). I love the looks of Comte de Chambord, although I have no desire to get a disease ridden plant that does not repeat well. Any suggestions in that color range? I've been thinking about Hermosa, Natchitoches (sp?) Noisette, Old Blush, or Le Vesuve; any comments? Wish I had room for Mrs. B.R. Cant! I also love the looks of Eden (Pierre Ronsard), but I'm not looking for a climber. Is there something suitably sized and healthy that would have a similar cream and pink combo? Thanks for all thougts and suggestions. |
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| Oh, and I forgot, any comments about G. Nabonnand or Gruss an Aachen? |
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| Not sure how these might do in your zone, but: What about Prairie Sunrise? It's an easy rose for me, a good bloomer and would probably fit into that spot. The flowers are full and fragrant. If you'd like something a little paler and more peach than apricot, what about Antoine Rivoire? |
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| Here are some suggestions, by color. Apricot. White-Cream Yellow Pink Good luck choosing a great rose. |
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| I have Thomas Affleck in a bed with BELINDA'S DREAM and Madame Lombard. That bed also has Russian sage and other perennials. The colour contrast is great. Thomas is almost mauve in the cooler weather, but reads deep, dark pink in the summer. He is just gorgeous. |
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| I have Thomas Affleck in a bed with BELINDA'S DREAM and Madame Lombard. That bed also has Russian sage and other perennials. The colour contrast is great. Thomas is almost mauve in the cooler weather, but reads deep, dark pink in the summer. He is just gorgeous. |
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| Kes and Lux, thanks for more roses for me to research! (I think I love doing the research almost as much as enjoying the roses in the garden.) Shopshops, I have been very attracted to Thomas Affleck. I have heard such good things about him, and he was looking fine the other day at the Farmer's Branch rose trials garden. I just wonder how he would look next to the deep red of Francis Dubreuil/Barcelona. What do you think? I'm giving some consideration to playing musical roses, and putting Souvenir de la Malmaison in the empty spot, and then I could put Thomas Affleck next to Belinda's Dream, where I'm sure he would look very good. (But, I really don't want to move roses, because I'm impatient, and I'm sure that it would set them back a year. Besides, I worry that I would not do a good job and hurt the rose. But maybe it really is what needs doing.) |
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