
'Elegant Gallica' Rose (Rosa gallica 'Officinalis' variety)
Hardy flowering shrub
Description: Medium pink, double blooms; flowers once per year in late spring or early summer
Habit: Medium-sized shrub to 4 feet high; spreads by suckers
Culture: Prefers rich, well-prepared garden loam and a warm, sunny location; prune just after flowering
Hardiness: USDA Zones 4b through 8b
“Elegant Gallica” is a particularly fine double form of the Apothecary’s Rose that was found in the gardens of the Wyck House, a 17th-century historic site in Germantown, PA, with a rose garden dating to the 1820s. The Gallicas are an important group of roses that, although not repeat blooming, had considerable influence on the evolution of modern roses.
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'Elegant Gallica' Rose (Rosa gallica 'Officinalis' variety)
Hardy flowering shrub
Description: Medium pink, double blooms; flowers once per year in late spring or early summer
Habit: Medium-sized shrub to 4 feet high; spreads by suckers
Culture: Prefers rich, well-prepared garden loam and a warm, sunny location; prune just after flowering
Hardiness: USDA Zones 4b through 8b
“Elegant Gallica” is a particularly fine double form of the Apothecary’s Rose that was found in the gardens of the Wyck House, a 17th-century historic site in Germantown, PA, with a rose garden dating to the 1820s. The Gallicas are an important group of roses that, although not repeat blooming, had considerable influence on the evolution of modern roses.
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Description
Hardy flowering shrub
Description: Medium pink, double blooms; flowers once per year in late spring or early summer
Habit: Medium-sized shrub to 4 feet high; spreads by suckers
Culture: Prefers rich, well-prepared garden loam and a warm, sunny location; prune just after flowering
Hardiness: USDA Zones 4b through 8b
“Elegant Gallica” is a particularly fine double form of the Apothecary’s Rose that was found in the gardens of the Wyck House, a 17th-century historic site in Germantown, PA, with a rose garden dating to the 1820s. The Gallicas are an important group of roses that, although not repeat blooming, had considerable influence on the evolution of modern roses.






















