Species: Mme. Grégoire Staechelin rose (Rosa x hybrida 'Mme Grégoire Staechelin')

Family: Roses (ROSACEAE)

Category: Flowering Plants

Location: NE

A. Flowering Plants

More extensive information on flowering plants can be found in a separate blog post.

B. Roses (ROSACEAE)

The Rose family gives us many of our most commercially important fruits, such as the Prunus species. They have alternate leaves and 5-petalled flowers.

C. Mme. Grégoire Staechelin rose (Rosa x hybrida 'Mme Grégoire Staechelin')

There are anywhere between 100 and 300 Rosa species, of which there are innumerable cultivars. The handful of roses planted in the north-east corner of the cemetery, just behind the gates, are therefore not each distinct species. They are cultivars, deliberately planted, and therefore certainly not 'wild' or 'native'. They are listed here as a record - and because these particular 'old roses' were planted by the Friends of Heene Cemetery to remember those people buried in the cemetery who have no headstone to mark their burial.

This climbing rose has pink, semi-double flowers. It was first hybridized in 1927. More details can be found on the David Austin website.

Images

Mme. Grégoire Staechelin rose

This climbing rose has pink, semi-double flowers. It was first hybridized in 1927.

Mme. Grégoire Staechelin rose

The hips of the Mme. Grégoire Staechelin rose are large and orange, photographed here in mid-October.