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Collector's item

Rosa Mrs Oakley Fisher - Hybrid Tea

Rosa Mrs Oakley Fisher
Modern Hybrid Tea Rose

5,0/5
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Thanks to Clothilde (order preparation and quality control), the young plant is already thriving in its location (near varieties: The Mermaid, Mutabilis, Viridiflora, New dawn, Banks alba). Testimony from an amateur who has successfully planted over 330 different varieties of roses in their garden.

Thierry P., 25/11/2018

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This plant carries a 24 months recovery warranty

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Value-for-money
A graceful variety, with the appearance of a botanical rose bush, producing beautiful lightly scented wild roses in a soft coppery yellow-orange colour, both charming and natural. Unrecognized here, this bush (arbuste) is a good perpetual bloomer, displaying reddish stems and bronze foliage that perfectly harmonize with its perpetual flowering from June to October. A disease-resistant variety, but a bit sensitive to cold in colder regions.
Flower size
5 cm
Height at maturity
90 cm
Spread at maturity
80 cm
Exposure
Sun, Partial shade
Hardiness
Hardy down to -23°C
Soil moisture
Moist soil
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Best planting time February, October to November
Recommended planting time January to April, September to December
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Flowering time June to October
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Description

Rosa 'Mrs Oakley Fisher', too little planted in our gardens, is perhaps the most refined of the single-flowered Hybrid Teas. It stands out for its graceful appearance of an old or botanical rose, its slender wood of thorny bush forming beautiful eglantines with a soft yellow colour nuanced with pale orange, both charming and natural. Its flowering lasts a long time, from spring to autumn. Although much smaller than its vigorous cousin 'Mutabilis', it shares with it a unique charm, excellent disease resistance, floribundity, but also a preference for mild climates. A rose to adopt when you love eglantines!

 

Rosa 'Mrs Oakley Fisher' is an English creation by Benjamin R. Cant & Sons, dating back to 1921. This variety is quite difficult to find in French horticultural trade despite all its value. A little slow to establish, it forms in a well-prepared soil a pretty, slender and rounded bush, with reddish-brown thorny stems, about 80-90cm (31.5 - 35.4in) in all directions, flexible, and covered with a small foliage resistant to diseases, of a shiny and original bronze-green colour. Its flowering is abundant from June to September-October. Its corollas, 5-6cm (2 - 2.4in) wide, are single, with 5 petals, gathered in clusters of 5 to 7 light flowers revealing a crown of yellow stamens and a small bright orange heart. The pointed orange buds open into flat and well-opened cups, blending different shades of yellow, salmon, and orange sorbet. Their fragrance is light.

 

Bush roses allow for beautiful small hedges, planted mixed at the edge of the terrace or in small-sized shrub beds. Associate them with Abelias, Nandinas, or Caryopteris for example. They are good companions for panicle phloxes and tall Gypsophilias. The moderate pruning and the natural distinction of the 'Mrs Oakley Fisher' rose make it a variety to highlight in a small garden, among non-invasive perennials (it fears competition from other plants, especially when young) with discreet flowering that will not overshadow its unique charm (white Astrantias, Stachys, Crambe cordifolia, small grasses...). According to the desires of each gardener, it can be planted in a bed of eglantine roses (Rosa mutabilis, English roses 'Morning Mist' or 'Fighting Temeraire'), accompanied by white varieties ('Marie Pavie', 'Swanny'), or mauve ones ('Blue Boy', 'Rhapsody in Blue', 'Roman Waltz'), or mixed with easy-to-grow perennials such as perennial geraniums, small-flowered carnations, or asters.

 

Rosa Mrs Oakley Fisher - Hybrid Tea in pictures

Rosa Mrs Oakley Fisher - Hybrid Tea (Flowering) Flowering

Plant habit

Height at maturity 90 cm
Spread at maturity 80 cm
Habit Irregular, bushy
Growth rate normal

Flowering

Flower colour orange
Flowering time June to October
Inflorescence Corymb
Flower size 5 cm
Fragrance slightly scented
Bee-friendly Attracts pollinators
Good for cut flowers Cut flower blooms
Fruit colour red

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour dark green

Botanical data

Genus

Rosa

Cultivar

Mrs Oakley Fisher

Family

Rosaceae

Other common names

Modern Hybrid Tea Rose

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Rootstock

Rosa canina Laxa (Wrapped bare root, 4L/5L pot)

Product reference713112

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Planting and care

Plant Rosa 'Mrs Oakley Fisher' from November to March, in ordinary, well-tilled, light and well-drained soil. Hybrid Tea roses prefer light soils and are a bit frost-sensitive. In soil that is too sandy, too compact or too dry in summer, it is preferable to bury compost, decomposed manure or compost at the bottom of the planting hole. This rose dreads waterlogged soils in winter. Install it in a sunny location, preferably with some shade in hot climates, in a place sheltered from strong winds. Roses are greedy plants, a specific fertilizer will be beneficial at the start of vegetation, and regularly during the entire flowering period. To encourage reblooming, regularly remove faded flowers.

Roses are often stained or ugly at the end of summer, but it is not a problem for their development. These stains are not harmful to the rose, it is a natural phenomenon. 

Planting period

Best planting time February, October to November
Recommended planting time January to April, September to December

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow
Type of use Border, Edge of border
Hardiness Hardy down to -23°C (USDA zone 6a) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 3 per m2
Exposure Sun, Partial shade
Soil pH Any
Soil type Clayey (heavy), Clayey-chalky (heavy and alkaline), Silty-loamy (rich and light)
Soil moisture Moist soil, Light, well-worked, fertile.

Care

Pruning instructions We will cut back the stems to about one quarter of their length (from 4 to 6 eyes from the base of the stem) at the end of winter. We will always prune above an eye directed outward so that the bush becomes fuller and the branches do not become tangled in the centre of the branches.
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time March
Soil moisture Moist soil
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground
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