Additional information
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$27.95
Hybrid Musk / Rambler (Discovered by Mike Darlow, United States, 1993)
Clusters of small, pure white, semi-double blooms with a wonderful fragrance followed by sprays of tiny hips. Repeat blooming, can take some shade. Grow as a 5-6 foot shrub in cold climates or as a taller climber in warmer areas.
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Diana Briggs (verified owner) –
My order from High Country Roses was very nicely packed and my plants intact, which was refreshing considering all the crushed and dead plants I received from other nurseries this past spring. I chose Darlow’s Enigma for a very tough spot in the front of my property, in poor soil with near-total shade, but the little plant is growing nicely. No blooms yet, but it’s grown significantly this summer and the foliage seems fairly resistant to bugs and disease. I’m hoping it will take over the fence and fill the corner one day. The way it’s tripled in size with NO sun and very little attention during a hard drought seems promising- I’ll cut back the trees to give it more light and air next year. Maybe then we’ll see some flowers!
sheenashakely –
My plant is in its third summer, but it spent its first winter on a porch in a large pot and then it was moved, planted before the first frost, and then moved again the next spring. This hasn’t stopped it from growing strongly to 4’. It’s thorns are very grabby, but I love the blossoms. Not many flowers have a wafting scent in our dry air, but this one manages it.
Lisa Arrowood –
This is a very vigorous rise which blooms profusely with a wonderful perfume that fills the air nearby. It does need either serious training, but it is quite thorny. I cut it back viciously after it blooms and it bounces back. I’d grow it just for the fragrance but the flowers themselves are not all that impressive. It does fine in partial shade.
Toni Hall –
I live in South Lake Tahoe, so we get plenty of snow which can bury my Darlow’s up to 5 feet. I’ve had this sturdy rose for about 5 years and its canes are about 5 feet tall now, planted under the eave of our house in a part of the garden which gets part shade. It puts out profuse sprays of single white petalled blooms that have a light and wonderful fragrance. The blooms continue through Fall until first frost. This is a beauty and the bees love it. It has done the best for our somewhat unpredictable mountain climate out of all the roses I’ve purchased from High Country.