THE VICAR’S DAUGHTERS COLLECTION

Three beautiful roses bred by the Rev Joseph Pemberton

And named after his daughter’s.

 FELICIA

Delicate soft pink and cream blooms fading to almost white. Flowering is most prolific in the spring, but is a little less so in summer.   However the late summer and autumn show is quite something as the flowers are borne in huge panicles bearing the most highly coloured and longest lasting flowers of the year.  If the spent flowers are not removed, large round red hips are produced which look most attractive among the autumn flowers. Good strong disease resistant foliage. Can really brighten up a  dull autumn day. Shade tolerant and makes a good hedge Excellent Perfume.

National Rose Society Certificate of Merit 1927 Royal Horticultural Society Award Of Garden Merit  1993 Bred by th Rev Joseph Pemberton and named after one of his daughters.

CORNELIA

This lovely old rose has been around a while but is just as popular as ever. A hybrid musk rose with the usual free flowering associated with this species of rose. The lovely rosette flowers are a rich apricot flushed pink and are borne in large arching trusses continually from summer to autumn.  A superb strong growing shrub with very few thorns plus good dark green bronze glossy foliage. Completely hardy but does best in a sunny spot out of the wind. Can be grown in the garden or large container, is shade tolerant and will cope with poorer soils. Distinct Musk Fragrance.

 Royal Horticultural Society Award Of Garden Merit 1993

Bred by the Rev Joseph Pemberton and named after one of his daughters.

 PENELOPE

This is a large, arching shrub with vigorous and disease free growth. It flowers continuously through summer and into autumn and produces a lovely show of hips in winter. The trusses of double, medium sized blooms are of a delicate light pink and apricot shades fading to white with age. ‘Penelope’ makes a fine specimen rose in the garden or an effective informal hedge, and is useful for growing over walls or fences and will cope with partial shade. The blooms are sweetly scented.

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.
Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

 

Published in: on January 22, 2012 at 5:37 pm  Leave a Comment  
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NEW ROSES FOR 2012

THE ANNIVERSARY ROSE 

Hybrid Tea.  2006.  3ft-4ft.

An award winning Hybrid Tea of infinite charm which produces masses of large dusky plum pink blooms throughout the summer.
Healthy grey green maroon foliage shows the huge blooms off to perfection.
Strong citrus fragrance.
A superb rose for any anniversary.

Bred by Meilland in France 2006.  Introduced into the UK 2008.
Also known as ‘Forget-Me-Not’
AWARDS
Australian National Rose Trials. Most Fragrant Rose. Australian National Rose Trials. Silver Medal. Orleans National Rose Trials. Perfume prize. Hradec Králové Rose Trials. Golden Rose. Nantes Rose Trials. First Grand Prize. Le Roeulx Rose Trials. Certificatye Of Merit. Le Roeuix Rose Trials. Fragrance Award.
GOLD STANDARD AWARD WINNER 2009

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.

Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on November 15, 2011 at 8:29 am  Leave a Comment  
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NEW ROSES FOR 2012

HOMMAGE A BARBARA

Shrub Rose
1997.  4ft

A very beautiful modern shrub rose which looks sure to be a hit with rose lovers,
Stunning blooms of intense deep red developing to almost black.
Blooms in flushes throughout the summer and is a real head turner in the garden.
Healthy matt green foliage and bushy upright growth.
Not a powerful perfume but very pleasing.
Don’t leave it too late to order as we have limited stocks this year.

Named after a French singer who was known as just ‘Barbara’
Bred in France in 1997 by Delbard but introduced in France in 2004.

AVAILABLE FROM NOVEMBER 2011

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.

Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on October 29, 2011 at 7:55 am  Leave a Comment  
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NEW ROSES FOR 2012

EYES FOR YOU 

Floribunda.

2008 2ft 6ins

A lovely but very unusual rose.

A floribunda with large blooms which can be as big as 4ins across.  The colour is described as mauvy-lilac but the main eye catcher is the large purple blotch in the centre.

The huge blooms repeat all summer and really stand out in the crowd.

The foliage is very healthy with good disease resistance.

Not very tall so will grow in a container or the garden.

A bed of these eye catchers will stop the traffic.

Lovely perfume.

Bred by Peter J James. UK

Introduced by Warners Roses.

AVAILABLE FROM NOVEMBER 2011

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.

Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on October 25, 2011 at 7:20 am  Leave a Comment  
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NEW ROSES FOR 2012

CITY OF YORK

Rambling Rose.
1945.   15ft.

This lovely old Rambler has been around a while, but we have included it in our Rambler section as we have had so many requests for it as it is considered to be one of the best of the repeat ramblers.
Most ramblers are only summer flowering, but this is one of the few that repeat well.
It produces large clusters of creamy white blooms with attractive yellow centres, plus quite a good perfume for a rambler.
Leathery glossy green foliage which has excellent disease resistance.
A very versatile rose as it can be grown up trees, is shade tolerant, can be grown on any aspect including a North wall and will cope with poor soils.

Won an American Rose Society Gold Medal in 1950

Bred by Tantau. Germany 1939-1945. There are some date differences of opinion regarding this rose.

AVAILABLE FROM NOVEMBER 2011

For details of all our current roses, see our extensive web site.

Over 1000 varieties to choose from

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on October 2, 2011 at 8:25 am  Leave a Comment  
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ROSE NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

FRANCE

A NOSE FOR A ROSE

ROSE de MAI

(Rosa Centifolia  -  the hundred petal rose)

Grasse is truly the Mecca of the fragrance world. The pretty Provencal town nestled between the Mediterranean and the mountains is at the centre of the French flower growing region. While many companies source or synthesise their perfume ingredients elsewhere, Grasse jasmine and rose de mai are prized above all others.

These two flowers are at the heart of Chanel fragrances and to uphold its heritage the company maintains control of its own flower fields and buys a fair chunk of the area’s production. It has the reputation of the world’s most famous fragrance, Chanel No 5, to safeguard.

The Grasse jasmine harvest is under way now, with 7000 flowers needed to yield a kilo of jasmine.

Late spring is the northern season when the May rose is harvested at dawn. Women, some from families who have been travelling to Grasse for many generations, place the roses in hessian bags for speedy local processing. (The fragile jasmine flowers are delicately carried in baskets.)

To secure its supply of these blooms for its 90-year-old signature scent, Chanel has worked for five generations with one family of growers, the Muls.

Rose pickers bring in 50-70 tonnes of rosa centifolia blooms for processing, with 350-400 flowers yielding one kilogram of petals. Experienced pickers can gather up to 7kg of flowers an hour.

The sheltered location of Grasse and its rich mix of clay and chalk soils create an ideal hothouse for flower-growing. The town is home to many old parfumeries and it is still the training ground for the lucrative global fragrance industry’s famed “noses”, who must learn to distinguish many hundreds of scents.

Among the alumini are Les Nez of Chanel, Jacques Polge and Christopher Sheldrake.

Sheldrake, an Englishman whose earliest scent memories are of early years in India and morning mist in English gardens, credits his internship in Grasse with giving him a love for “the history and unique life of each raw material”.

One of his favourite smell associations, he tells Viva, is jasmine at midnight. (Grasse jasmine, introduced by the Moors, differs from that now obtained in Asia and Africa for perfumery because it is the result of jasmine grandiflorum grafted on to jasmine officinalis. It is nearly 20 times as expensive as a jasmine absolute when the concentrated essence is obtained elsewhere.)

Sheldrake first joined Chanel in 1980 for three years, leaving to work at Quest with Serge Lutens. He developed many Lutens scents and spent time in Japan. He returned to Chanel in 2005 as director of research and development and is co-credited with Polge as creator of a number of Les Exclusifs scents.

Polge has been the house’s perfumer since 1978, and created Coco, Cristalle, Allure, Coco Mademoiselle, Chance, the version of Chanel No.5 known as Eau Premiere and the new No 19 Poudre. The men enjoy rare bonuses in what was once an essentially solitary craft, but is now much commercialised and generally highly moderated by marketers – they are given time to develop new scents and they have a sounding board in each other.

“It is a business that is very competitive so it is rare for a fellow perfumer to share their creative ideas,” says Sheldrake.

“However, as Jacques Polge says, two noses are better than one.

“We both have our own point of view. We do not always agree with each other but having discussed the subject, we agree on a solution. We are constantly learning from each other, from each other’s point of view.”

Sheldrake explains to Viva how Grasse is at the centre of keeping a legend alive.

What does the original No. 5 signify to you? How would you describe it to someone who had never smelled it before?

The original No. 5 is a very refined work of art which at the same time has the advantage of not having any key ingredients which have become dated. It is also an historical event because it was certainly the first fragrance that had an abstract feel which could have been unreassuring but was the opposite. And I would just add following on in time, other fragrances were created in the same family which today no longer exist simply because Chanel is the only company who for 90 years has been able to maintain its fragrance to its optimum potential.

Chanel’s approach to fragrance – keeping it in-house and owning its own perfume fields – is very different from many houses; what does this bring to your work?

Establishing a relationship with the farmers in Grasse to develop our own jasmine fields was the beginning of an activity which has become increasingly important for Chanel. It was necessary to conserve and increase the jasmine production in France which otherwise would have disappeared by now. This was necessary to maintain the quality of our icon, the Extrait de No. 5. Having the fields in Grasse opened a new aspect to our work which has encouraged perfumers to work more closely with our producers.

Today we have grown the jasmine and the rose de mai to which we added four years ago, our iris palida fields and this year a new tuberose production. To give you an idea of our commitment, by the end of this year we should have finished a two-year planting programme to add 30,000 more rose bushes.

The perfumers are involved and in control of the whole chain from the botany through to the finished product, including the responsibility of working with legislation experts on the safety of our products.

So what makes us different? We are the only fashion house that has always had its own in-house laboratory and perfumers. This gives us the opportunity to consider equally our existing fragrances and the possibility of new creations.

How do you balance being a guardian of Chanel’s fragrance heritage, while being tasked with creating a vibrant fragrance future (and a sizeable chunk of the house’s revenue)?

We need to know perfectly our tradition to move forward with our creations. Like the traditional fragrances, every new fragrance, every creation follows the same process or the same Chanel philosophy if you like. That is so the fragrance represents an era and not the current fashion.

Does the heritage of the house mean that you can never start with a clean slate?

We can start with a clean slate. For each project, there are many ideas between the perfumers that we dream of. And when you think that a new fragrance can take up to six years to come to fruition, in six years we have many ideas that get worked on and as we get closer to the day when we have to select “the” fragrance, one of our creations will be a more obvious fit for the project.

So the other ideas, remain in the cupboard – in our closely guarded fragrance cupboard.

What benefits has technology brought to perfume?

Since I started in perfumery there have been many advances in technology – by using technology to monitor every stage of the perfuming process can improve the quality. To give you an example, the traditional method for drying ingredients in a warehouse resulted in some portion succumbing to mould. Today, we use an industrial-size humidifier for two days, which allows the ingredients to dry out faster and more efficiently.

How much of the rose and jasmine harvest is used in No. 5? If there was, say, a crop failure what are your back-up resources?

In the case of No. 5 extrait, all the jasmine from Grasse. We have been informed by one of our suppliers that Chanel buys about a third of all production of jasmine which is absolutely unbelievable. We select and stock jasmine for our yearly needs and we always have security stock. In 2010 we had a small crop of jasmine in Grasse but had sufficient security stocks in storage.

Is it important to you to smell the roses?

Much inspiration comes from smelling natural products like the rose. It is not essential to smell the rose every harvest for the sake of inspiration but it is certainly pleasant.

What is your favourite of the fragrances you have created for Chanel and why?

I like Coromandel from Les Exclusifs range. It has a lovely patchouli note.

Surrounded as you are by scents do you wear fragrance yourself and, if so, do you have a wardrobe of options or a signature scent?

My signature scent is an ambery fragrance I have made for myself. Of course, I can only wear it on weekends. It is natural to have a fragrance wardrobe. A fragrance expresses the way we feel or what we want to communicate.

Magic mix

Chanel No 5 was launched in 1921 when Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel famously picked the bottle labelled No. 5 from among the scents Ernest Beaux was testing. The former perfumer to the court of the Tsar had been tasked with coming up with the world’s first designer fragrance. In doing so, he developed what is considered the first “modern” scent.

No 5 is rich in floral notes, but with a sparkling quality from the use of synthetic aldehydes. It remains a bestseller in the prestige market. Its striking top notes are dominated by ylang-ylang from the Comoros, neroli and aldehydes. The heart opens around scents of rose and jasmine, then gives way to vibrating notes of sandalwood, trailed by lingering waves of vanilla and bourbon vetiver. (The new Eau Premiere version is lighter on the ylang ylang and adds a mellowness from vanilla.)

Once the common ingredients of jasmine and may rose are harvested in Grasse, they are placed in large stills for the extraction process. After many hours a “concrete” is obtained and this is distilled to produce flower essences. The essences are sent to the production plant in Compiegne, where Jacques Polge makes an olfactory verification to ensure all is in order. Raw materials are mixed and the fragrance left to mature before bottling, which can be for several months. Only three people know the complete No. 5 recipe.

After packaging, the final step is baudruchage – a traditional technique reserved for the No. 5 parfum. A fine membrane is placed over the neck of the bottle by hand and this is held in place by two rows of black pearl cotton thread to ensure an air and water-tight seal. The addition of a wax stamp with the Chanel double-C seal guarantees the tamper-proof quality of the bottle.

For details of all our current roses, see our extensive web site.

Over 1000 varieties to choose from

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on September 16, 2011 at 6:27 pm  Leave a Comment  
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