Morden Centennial, shrub

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Brief summary

Modern Rose, shrub "Morden Centennial", introduced by Henry H. Marshall in 1980, Usually is fuchsia in color, semi double bloom shape, blooms 7 - 8 cm in size, has 3-5 buds per stem, repeat rebloom, has light fragrance, the bush shape can be bushy, 150 - 175 cm in height, 125 cm in width, low resistance to rain, moderate resistance to black spot, strong resistance to mildew.

Main characteristics

Aroma
Rebloom
Bush Shape
Bloom Shape
Semi double

Size

Height
150 - 175 cm
Width
125 cm
Bloom size
7 - 8 cm
Buds / Stem
3-5
Petal Count

Resistance

Heat
Shade
Rain
Black Spot
Mildew

More information

Morden Centennial is a Canadian rose. Flowers are pale crimson, fading to bright pink, terry. They appear singly or in brushes up to 15 pcs (usually 3–7), followed by red fruits. The first flowering is abundant, and there are always a couple of flowers on the plant until the next abundant flowering in autumn. Removing blooming flowers stimulates the emergence of new ones. The foliage is dark, shiny; black spotting is sometimes possible; the bush is strong. Pruning makes the rose branch and increases the number of flowers.

Resistant to disease, but slightly susceptible to black spot. Can freeze in severe winters, but in general winter-hardy.

This rose is a Canadian selection of 1980. The bush is very strong, erect, with disease-resistant, dense green foliage. Frost damage occurs only at temperatures below -30C. Even if the tops are damaged by frost, it grows well from the base and blooms with terry pink flowers. The flowers are large, appearing in clusters.

The flowers are terry pink, appearing in clusters of up to 15. Each flower has 50 petals, the fragrance is light. The leaves consist of 7 simple leaflets, the bush is branched. Flowers always appear on young growth. Withstands the harshest winters without freezing.