Data specific to Roses (Edit)
Bloom size: Large: 4-5"
Bloom shape: Other: Cupped to flat
Petal count: very full: 40+ petals
Rose bloom color: Deep pink
Extra Bloom Info: Quartered, with button eye
Rebloom: Good
Class: Hybrid perpetual
Extra Color Info: Deep rose-pink
Growth Habit: Medium-tall, 3-5 feet, bushy
Fragrance: Moderate
Hybridizer & year: Jean Desprez, 1841
Optimal growing zones: USDA zones 4-9

General Plant Information (Edit)
Plant Habit: Shrub
Life cycle: Perennial
Sun Requirements: Full Sun
Soil pH Preferences: Moderately acid (5.6 – 6.0)
Slightly acid (6.1 – 6.5)
Neutral (6.6 – 7.3)
Slightly alkaline (7.4 – 7.8)
Plant Height: 3-5 feet
Plant Spread: 3-4 feet
Leaves: Deciduous
Flowers: Showy
Fragrant
Flower Color: Pink
Flower Time: Spring
Summer
Fall
Uses: Cut Flower
Wildlife Attractant: Bees
Propagation: Other methods: Cuttings: Stem
Cuttings: Tip
Miscellaneous: With thorns/spines/prickles/teeth
Child plants: one child plant

Image
Common names
  • Rose
Also sold as:
  • Baronne Prévost

Photo Gallery

Date: 2020-03-31

Date: 2020-05-22

Date: 2021-04-02
Location: my garden, Arvada, Colorado
Date: june
Location: Wyck Historic Rose Garden, Philadelphia (Germantown), Pennsylvania USA
Date: 2018-05-26

Date: 2021-07-08
Photo by Steve812
Location: Wyck Historic Rose Garden, Philadelphia (Germantown), Pennsylvania USA
Date: 2018-05-26

Date: 2020-03-25
Photo by Steve812
Location: Knoxville, TN

San Jose Heritage Rose Garden, CA.
Photo by Steve812
Photo by zuzu

San Jose Heritage Rose Garden, CA.

Photo courtesy of: florum

Photo courtesy of: florum

Date: 2008-11-06
Photo courtesy Antique Rose Emporium. Used with permission.
Comments:
  • Posted by zuzu (Northern California - Zone 9a) on Aug 28, 2012 8:49 PM concerning plant:
    This is the most infuriating rose I've ever grown. It has no resistance whatsoever to pests and diseases. In fact, it's comparable to a pest and disease magnet and it suffers from maladies that never strike any other rose in my garden. In addition to being highly vulnerable to black spot, which is a major problem here, and powdery mildew, which is a minor problem, confined only to my large ramblers and this ridiculous rose, it's the only rose I've ever had that has exhibited signs of rust and downy mildew, which simply do not exist anywhere else in my area.

    The blooms are beautiful, but the foliage and the shrub itself look awful all year, ravaged by the previously mentioned diseases and a variety of pests -- curculio weevils, rose slugs, thrips, etc.

    I put up with its unsightly appearance for about 20 years, but finally had enough and dug it up last year. It appears to be a never-ending torment, however. I must have missed a small piece of root because it came up again with a vengeance this year, producing beautiful blooms and hideous foliage.

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