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'Clotilde' rose Description
'Bougère' rose photo
Photo courtesy of HubertG
Availability:
Commercially available
HMF Ratings:
7 favorite votes.  
ARS:
Medium pink Tea.
Origin:
Bred by Bougère (France, 1832). Bred by Nicolas Rolland (France, before 1866).
Introduced in Australia by Tasmania Botanical Gardens in 1859 as 'Bougère'.
Introduced in France by Eugène Verdier fils aîne in 1868 as 'Clotilde'.
Class:
Tea.  
Bloom:
Pink, lighter outer petals. [White to salmon-pink, deep pink center.]  Center sometimes violet. [Variable colours] (Rose hortensia).  Moderate fragrance.  Average diameter 4".  Large, double (17-25 petals), very full (41+ petals), cupped, reflexed bloom form.  Blooms in flushes throughout the season.  
Habit:
Dark green foliage.  3 to 7 leaflets.  
Growing:
USDA zone 6b through 9b (default).  
Patents:
Patent status unknown (to HelpMeFind).
Parentage:
Notes:
August Jäger believes that Bougère was sold as Anna Hilzer by Hilzer (1892). The synonym with 'Clothilde' by Rolland might just mean a similarity of the two roses. Roseraie L'Haÿ had listed 'Anna Hilzer', 'Bougère' and 'Clothilde' separately in 1902.
Rolland introduced 'Clotilde' as a seedling of 'Bougère'. Later authors believed it is the same rose.
Modern Roses 12 lists two roses under the synonym of Bougère: one is Clotilde, bred by Roland, 1867, described as medium pink with violet pink, and the other is Bougère, bred by Bougère, 1832, described as deep salmon shaded bronze, probably extinct.
 
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