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"Joan's Pantry" rose References
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Magazine  (2020)  Page(s) 11. Vol 42, No. 4.  
 
Pat Toolan, Perfumed Roses.
And of course there are all the others that you fall in love with when you prefer highly scented roses, such as the raspberry-lifesaver-scented, red Chinas including Rookwood “Joseph Falconer” / “Joan’s Pantry”.
Magazine  (2020)  Page(s) 16. Vol 42, No. 4.  Includes photo(s).
 
Editor. Below, scented rose Rookwood “Joseph Falconer” syn. “Joan’s Pantry” (p. 11). Climbing, flowers in spring. Similar to Malton (Hybrid China 1828) but the flowers are small.
Magazine  (2019)  Page(s) 18. Vol 41, No. 2.  
 
From: Heritage Roses in Australia journal.

Margaret Furness.  Renmark - What Still Needs Backup. 
I haven’t checked the Rookwood roses other than Teas.  I hope that Malton (1828 H. Ch. syn “Joseph Falconer”, grows like a rambler) is in The Long Garden. 
Magazine  (2017)  Page(s) 39. Vol 39, No. 1.  Includes photo(s).
 
Margaret Furness.  Found Roses at Hawthorndene. 
Further along a rose cascades out of a tree, next to a cafe built in 1920; hence the study name "Joan's Pantry" (see photos in the journal 33: 4, p2).  It has scented red flowers with a pale reverse, and is also present in Rookwood as "Joseph Falconer".  There is speculation that it may have been an understock.
Magazine  (2016)  Page(s) Table S2.  
 
fulgens gallique, Origin of the sample: Loubert Rose Garden, Genetic group 4, Percentage of assignation: 63.7, 1828, HGal, Vibert, Origin: France Paris, Ploidy: 4, measured
Magazine  (2011)  Page(s) 51. Vol 33, No. 3.  
 
Pat Toolan.  Barossa & Beyond.
...at Renmark.  The growth of some of the roses has been extraordinary, and pruning back and digging out roses have been a great challenge - thanks Paul Lindon for tackling the huge spare plant of "Joan's Pantry" / "Joseph Falconer".
Magazine  (2011)  Page(s) 2. Vol 33, No. 4..  Includes photo(s).
 
Photo Gallery:  Some Spring Flowering Foundlings.
"Joan's Pantry", from a 1920 cafe in the Adelaide Hills;  same as Rookwood "Joseph Falconer" Possibly understock. China ancestry.  Flower about 5cm. Lovely scent.  Sets oval yellow-orange hips.  Climbing and cascading, vigorous.
Magazine  (2005)  Page(s) 27. Vol 27, No. 4.  
 
Kathie Mills.  Barbara May's Garden.
....Where roses have not yet been identified they are given the name of the grave on which they are planted.  This tickled us as Barbara introduced us to "Joseph Falconer".... and many others and I understand her attachment to the roses when they represent past citizens many of whom shaped this country.
Book  (Dec 2000)  Page(s) 46.  
 
Joseph Boyau was the successor to Guérin, as well as to the nurseryman Malton [who was Guérin's brother-in-law]
Book  (Apr 1999)  Page(s) 44.  
 
[Mentioned in the description for 'Fulgens' Gallica, Vibert, ca. 1830] 'Fulgens' is also a synonym of the Hybrid China 'Malton' (Guérin, 1829), which is "cherry carmine red."
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