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'Fellowship' rose Description
Photo courtesy of Øyvind H.O.
HMF Ratings:
113 favorite votes. Average rating:
GOOD+.
Class:
Floribunda. (Series: Easy-To-Love ™)
Bloom:
Orange - apricot. Moderate, citrus, sweet fragrance. 25 to 30 petals. Average diameter 4". Large, full (26-40 petals), borne mostly solitary, in small clusters, cupped, flat to cupped, ruffled bloom form. Prolific, blooms in flushes throughout the season. Small, pointed, ovoid buds.
Habit:
Medium, bushy, upright, well-branched. Medium, glossy, medium green, leathery foliage. 3 to 7 leaflets.
Height: 30" to 5' (75 to 150cm). Width: 2' to 6' (60 to 185cm).
Growing:
USDA zone 5b and warmer. Can be used for beds and borders, cut flower or garden. Vigorous. produces decorative hips. Disease susceptibility: susceptible to blackspot . Spring Pruning: Remove old canes and dead or diseased wood and cut back canes that cross. In warmer climates, cut back the remaining canes by about one-third. In colder areas, you'll probably find you'll have to prune a little more than that. Requires spring freeze protection (see glossary - Spring freeze protection) . Can be grown in the ground or in a container (container requires winter protection).
Patents:
European Union - Patent No: 347 on 2 Aug 1996 Application No: 19950512 on Aug 1995 First commercialisation in EU: April 1, 1992; outside EU: May 1, 1994.
Expiry of protection on February 1, 2017. United States - Patent No: PP 9,161 on 13 Jun 1995 VIEW USPTO PATENTApplication No: 08/176,131 on 22 Dec 1993 ...The following descriptive matter pertains to roses of the new cultivar grown outdoors in August 1993 in Upland, Calif.
Notes:
According to the 1999 American Rose Annual, the ARS exhibition name for this rose is Livin' Easy. 'Fellowship' was named in Britain for the Rotary movement. In the USA they call it 'Livin' Easy'... In his garden in Tyler, Texas, Mark Chamblee, of Chamblee's Rose Nursery, grows 'Belinda's Dream', 'Marie Daly', 'Marie Pavie', 'Livin' Easy', 'Easy Going', 'Knockout', and 'Mermaid'. Mark likes these varieties because "they have great hardiness and disease resistance, they are low maintenance and are very free blooming."
[The 1999 American Rose Annual says 'Easy Living' is a parent of Easy Vibes, which see.]
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