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Paul Neyron produces really huge, deep pink, fragrant blooms. These blooms, which can easily be six inches across, are usually produced singly with the occasional small cluster of two or three. As with other hybrid perpetuals in my garden, the blooms are at the end of long, stiff canes that sometimes reach five feet in height. It repeated fairly well for a hybrid perpetual, blooming well in the spring and having at least a couple of blooms on it all summer long. It then picked up and bloomed quite a bit in the fall.
The plant is as winter hardy as my hardier hybrid teas. It will suffer some cane dieback in the winter, sometimes dying completely to the ground. But it always does come back with plenty of vigor in the spring.
This is an own root plant, obtained by rooting a cutting.