Rosa 'Schoener's Nutkana'
Rosa 'Schoener's Nutkana' is a deep pink rose variety named after Father Georg Schöner (1864–1941), a priest who became a notable rose breeder, who developed this rose in 1930 as a cross between Rosa nutkana and the hybrid perpetual 'Paul Neyron' (Levet, 1869).<ref name=hmfr>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
This hybrid nutkana is a shrub rose with large, single flowers, five-petalled but sometimes with another one or two, reaching an average diameter of Template:Convert.<ref name=RHSaz>Template:Cite book</ref> Their colour is light to carmine-pink with a large circle of yellow stamens. The long-lasting flowers are moderately fragrant, develop from small, pointed buds, and appear in small clusters of two to five on short strong stems in a spring or summer flush with some scattered flowers later on.<ref name=hmfr /> In autumn, the shrub sports rose hips.
The plant tends to be a tall, sprawling shrub, with very few thorns on its arching shoots and small light to medium grey-green foliage with seven leaflets. 'Schoener's Nutkana' can grow Template:Convert high and Template:Convert wide.<ref name=hmfr /><ref name=RHSaz /> The vigorous shrub tolerates half-shade and poorer soils, is very disease resistant and winter hardy down to −25 °C (USDA zone 5).<ref name=RHSaz /><ref name=classic>Template:Cite book</ref> It is well suited to form hedges.<ref name=classic />