@Wild_Violet ..ok, it's rather a tall order to i.d. an obscure rose that may be a rootstock from what you've shown there, we really need more photos of blooms, that one may not be typical, ideas about scent, photos of the stems just below the bloom, thorns, and more photos of the leaves.
However, saying that, I think your rose is Rosa multiflora 'De La Grifferaie'..Â
If you can provide more pictures and information, that would help a lot.. thanks..
Lovely roses everyone and some stunning photography too, @Athelas Draga looks good enough to eat.
@Wild_Violet that’s blooms from the stem of a standard? Intriguing, looks nothing like the usual wild rootstock. In the US they do use a red rose called Dr. Huey as trunk stock but it doesn’t look much like that either. I wonder where Tesco got their standard roses from..
Nothing much new happening here, we are entering a heatwave and blooms are frazzling, so just a few hanger’s on..
Cascade of Harlow Carr on an octopus cane:
Folle Courtisane:
Very delicate colour on Mrs. Oakley Fisher:
Julia Child, emerging and fading bloom colours:
Own root Munstead Wood looking untypical in both colour and form:
Mountainous Northern Catalunya, Spain. Hot summers, cold winters.
I've got a lot of catching up to do on the thread, looking forward to reading back this evening and making notes...
It's very windy here just now. Yesterday it was battering the roses and it's the same today and looks likely to remain so for a couple more days. Several roses have finally opened, they were in bud for such a long time. Others still to bloom, it's just not typical June weather. Some photos from just before the wind got up.
'Eustacia Vye' is blooming nicely but I think I ought to have pruned a bit lower. Two stems at the back I've tied to a wire on the wall but the ones growing outward are across the path! (Or they were when I last looked. This wind may break them yet....) Perhaps a small obelisk in the planter might be best?
Folle Courtesane is a fabulous colour and wow, Eustacia Vye. Annoying but those blooms are worth walking around/getting snagged/shreds to pieces for, Woodgreen?
I previously had a love/hate relationship with Gabriel Oak but now it's all love. The sunlight catches the gorgeous deep pink upwards-facing blooms, the shrub is growing upright and decorously without any support, the scent is intense... the brightest and most beautiful thing in the rear part of the garden.
@murasaki This is 'Open Arms', very similar in size to 'Lady of the Lake'; flowers all summer and the blooms stand up to pretty much anything the weather can throw at them...these in the photo have been battered by strong winds and rain for three days now and still look great.
@Nollie I personally can't detect much of a scent, but what I can smell if I bury my nose into a flower is a sweet rosey smell, very pleasant, (please forgive my very limited descriptive abilities).
@Fire I believe that is fair to say of MH . Yellow fading into cream.My mini one is showing the same .  Some snapshots today… bees paradise ..  Charles Emp is really growing on me..
Posts
..ok, it's rather a tall order to i.d. an obscure rose that may be a rootstock from what you've shown there, we really need more photos of blooms, that one may not be typical, ideas about scent, photos of the stems just below the bloom, thorns, and more photos of the leaves.
However, saying that, I think your rose is Rosa multiflora 'De La Grifferaie'..Â
If you can provide more pictures and information, that would help a lot.. thanks..
@Wild_Violet that’s blooms from the stem of a standard? Intriguing, looks nothing like the usual wild rootstock. In the US they do use a red rose called Dr. Huey as trunk stock but it doesn’t look much like that either. I wonder where Tesco got their standard roses from..
Nothing much new happening here, we are entering a heatwave and blooms are frazzling, so just a few hanger’s on..
Cascade of Harlow Carr on an octopus cane:
Folle Courtisane:
Very delicate colour on Mrs. Oakley Fisher:
Julia Child, emerging and fading bloom colours:
Own root Munstead Wood looking untypical in both colour and form:
It's very windy here just now. Yesterday it was battering the roses and it's the same today and looks likely to remain so for a couple more days.
Several roses have finally opened, they were in bud for such a long time. Others still to bloom, it's just not typical June weather.
Some photos from just before the wind got up.
Zephirine Drouhin
Souvenir du Docteur Jamain
Natalie Nypels
'Marie Pavie', and a general view of where they are sited.
They get the sun in the afternoon and early evening.Â
I previously had a love/hate relationship with Gabriel Oak but now it's all love. The sunlight catches the gorgeous deep pink upwards-facing blooms, the shrub is growing upright and decorously without any support, the scent is intense... the brightest and most beautiful thing in the rear part of the garden.
This is 'Open Arms', very similar in size to 'Lady of the Lake'; flowers all summer and the blooms stand up to pretty much anything the weather can throw at them...these in the photo have been battered by strong winds and rain for three days now and still look great.
@Nollie
I personally can't detect much of a scent, but what I can smell if I bury my nose into a flower is a sweet rosey smell, very pleasant, (please forgive my very limited descriptive abilities).
 Some snapshots today…
bees paradise ..
 Charles Emp is really growing on me..