The lower part is lighter in color, the terminal lobule is stipitate, the lateral lobule is subsessile, the total petiole is longer, and there are scattered thorns and glandular hairs; Most stipules are attached to the petiole, only the top is ear-shaped and the edge is often glandular hairy.
Several flowers are clustered, sparse and solitary, 4-5 cm in diameter; Pedicel 2.5-6 cm long, nearly hairless or glandular hairy, sepals ovate, caudate-acuminate at the top, sometimes leaflike, often pinnate lobes at the edge, sparsely entire, hairless outside, densely villous inside; Petals double to semi double, red, pink to white.
Extended data:
breeding method
1. Sowing: that is, spring sowing, hole sowing or furrow sowing, which generally germinates and emerges in mid-April. Transplanting time is divided into spring planting and autumn planting, usually after defoliation in late autumn or before sap flow in early spring.
2. Division: Division and reproduction are mostly carried out in early spring or late autumn. The method is to dig out the whole rose with the soil and divide it. Each rose has 1 to 2 branches and a few fibrous roots. It will be planted in a pot or in the open, and it will bloom that year.
3. Cutting: When the rose is dormant in early spring or late autumn, cut off mature branches with 3 to 4 buds for cutting. If the shoots are cut off, shade them properly and keep the seedbed moist. Generally, it can take root 30 days after cutting, and the survival rate is 70% to 80%. When cutting, rooting powder is used to dip branches, and the survival rate is high.