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Initial post
23 JUL 16 by
MikeNZ
The patent says that the seed parent is Precious Platinum and the pollen parent is an unnamed seedling.
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Initial post
13 JAN 13 by
MikeNZ
I have two Smooth Prince roses. The flowers seem to last a long time; I have a Blackberry Nip which has slightly darker flowers, and the petals of Blackberry Nip have already fallen off while those on Smooth Prince are still there - I'll try to time the next set of blooms for an accurate comparison.
In my opinion the flowers of Smooth Prince do have a slight fruity fragrance, but also a stronger tea fragrance, though the overall fragrance is light.
I was hoping to use Smooth Prince for cross pollinating, however according to the patent information [http://patents.justia.com/1991/PP007706.html] Smooth Prince seldom produces hips, and then only with its own pollen. I tried pollen from Aotearoa (2), Iceberg(2), Brother Cadfael(2) and its own pollen(2) - none of the flowers produced hips. The stigmas seem to remain relatively dry.
Edit: June 2016. In a later cross, I did succeed in producing two seedlings from the seeds of Smooth Prince. Both are from Smooth Prince x Aotearoa. Neither have much fragrance and neither have set hips so far.
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Mike, my comment here really belongs in your rose 'My Love' bred in 2002 from Smooth Prince x Aotearoa. At first the seed parent of My Love was said to be The Prince, and then you commented that it was Smooth Prince. What am I missing please. Was the oft quoted date of 2002 incorrect?
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Reply
#2 of 3 posted
18 JUN 16 by
MikeNZ
Hi - I think you have mistaken me with someone else? I did not breed "My Love". I am a breeder, but only amateur, and haven't listed any of my roses yet.
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Sorry MikeNZ. I thought you were Mike Athy. Two Mike's, both in New Zealand, both breeding from Smooth Prince.
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Initial post
17 JUN 16 by
MikeNZ
Following on from my last comment - Here are photos of the two roses produced from the seeds of Smooth Prince. Both are Smooth Prince x Aotearoa.
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The second one, in particular, is a nice-looking flower, but given that one of Aotearoa's drawcards is its scent it'd be a pity to lose that when crossing it with something else.
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Initial post
19 DEC 15 by
MikeNZ
Why does the description say "dark red" when it is pale pink?
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Not sure. There is the dark red version from Sangerhausen mentioned in the references - and the pink version shown in the photos from Maryland, U.S. We need to hear from the unknown breeder or the photographer, member Tsilvers
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