Data specific to Roses (Edit)
Bloom size: Medium: 2-3"
Bloom shape: Other: Quartered
Petal count: very full: 40+ petals
Rose bloom color: Pink blend
Extra Bloom Info: In clusters
Rebloom: Good
Class: Floribunda
Extra Color Info: Pale pink, white reverse, aging to greenish-white
Growth Habit: 2-4 feet, bushy
Fragrance: None
Hybridizer & year: Ralph S. Moore, 2006
Optimal growing zones: USDA zone 5 and warmer

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: 2-4 feet
Plant Spread: 2-3 feet
Leaves: Deciduous
Flowers: Showy
Flower Color: Bi-Color: Pink and white
Flower Time: Spring
Summer
Fall
Uses: Cut Flower
Wildlife Attractant: Bees
Propagation: Other methods: Cuttings: Stem
Cuttings: Tip
Miscellaneous: With thorns/spines/prickles/teeth

Image
Alternative cultivar names:
  • 'Wedding Cake'
  • 'MORcake'

Common names
  • Rose

Photo Gallery
Location: my yard
Date: 2016-06-22
Wedding Cake--during one of its pink phases
Location: my yard
Date: 2016-04-05
Wedding Cake--with the green center
Uploaded by Mike
Location: my yard
Date: 2016-03-31
Wedding Cake--starting to have the green center
Uploaded by Mike
Location: my yard
This rose sometimes has a pink center or a green center.  Mine is
Comments:
  • Posted by Mike (Lower Hudson Valley, New York - Zone 6b) on Aug 22, 2014 8:11 PM concerning plant:
    A truly unusual rose, not only because of its unique combination of pink, yellow, and green hues, but its tightly packed, folded-over petals have a rare, rubbery texture and seem to last forever. I acquired my specimen as a tiny plant growing on its own roots from the hybridizer, Ralph Moore, a couple of years before he passed away at the age of 102. Being grown on its own roots has a pro and a con: My plant has remained tiny in size over the past 6 years, but has survived some brutally cold winters here in New York, while other roses grafted onto root stock gave up the ghost.

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