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Rose Profile

Felicia

Color: Pink, Apricot Class: Hybrid Musk Introduced: 1928 Best Zones: 6-10 Bloom Form: Double Repeat Bloom: Yes Shade Tolerant: Yes

Hybrid Musk roses weren't exactly created for small gardens, but 'Felicia' is one of the most adaptable for this purpose. The semi-double, apricot-pink flowers fading to pale peach under intense sun, are extremely sweet-scented.…

Photo courtesy of Angel Gardens Photo source

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At-a-Glance Profile

Garden Personality

A quick portrait of how this rose grows, blooms, and earns its place in a home garden.

Hybrid Musk Pink, Apricot Strong
Breeder
Rev. Joseph Hardwick Pemberton
Seller
Angel Gardens, Hummingbird Roses, Rogue Valley Roses
Introduced
1928
Best Zones
6-10
3-8 Height
4-9 Width
9-16 Petals

Bloom Style

How It Shows Up in the Garden

Bloom Form
Double
Fragrance
Strong
Repeat Bloom
Yes

Garden Fit

Where It Is Most Comfortable

Shade Tolerance
Yes
Rose Class
Hybrid Musk
Color Family
Pink, Apricot

Background

Breeding and Source Notes

Seller Signals
Angel Gardens, Hummingbird Roses, Rogue Valley Roses

Where to Look Next

Rose Market

Start here if you are trying to buy this rose. This table is set up for quick scanning so you can compare seller listings, pricing, and current offers in one place.

Seller Listing Price Offers Link
Angel Gardens Felicia In stock $20.00
Discount Code 10% • ROSEGEEK10
ARS Offer 10% • Only available with phone orders.
Visit Seller
Hummingbird Roses Felicia — Hummingbird Roses Out of stock $32.00 Visit Seller
Rogue Valley Roses Felicia - Rogue Valley Roses Out of stock $26.95
ARS Offer 10% • Only available with phone orders.
Visit Seller

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What Growers Notice

Notes, Photos, and Shared Experience

Read the overview first, then look through shared photos and real grower notes to get a better feel for how this rose behaves.

Overview

Hybrid Musk roses weren't exactly created for small gardens, but 'Felicia' is one of the most adaptable for this purpose. The semi-double, apricot-pink flowers fading to pale peach under intense sun, are extremely sweet-scented. Their light clusters decorate a narrow bush that is easy to keep pruned to a 4 to 5 foot height. The smooth, rigid canes are not heavily branched; they tend to lean out from the base rather like those of a stiff climber. Cutting the rose back will keep it shrubbier and better covered by the light green foliage, but it can be allowed to develop to pillar-rose height. It will eventually reach as much as 9 or 10 feet this way, but it must be either trained when the canes are still young enough to be flexible, or simply fanned out flat on a trellis. The natural growth habit of the rose is not ideal for a specimen plant, but it works very well in a bed of large perennials, especially some of the big blue salvias. Like others of its class, 'Felicia' is a tough and healthy rose with a great deal of shade tolerance. It differs in being a fairly constant bloomer and a good cut flower.

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