Taxon ID:
Usage Facet: class=edible; edible_score=1.0; ornamental_score=0.0; inferred_from_taxon=no
Relationships: 0 | Linked Entities (visible): 0 | Evidence claims: 6 | History events: 0 | Catalog issue offerings: 0
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Evidence Badge: emerging | claims=6 | sources=2 | contradictions=0
Claim Types: description_snippet:2, anecdote_snippet:1, growth_habit:1, keeping_quality:1, recommendation_context:1 | Open evidence summary JSON | Open citation drawer JSON
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Link Filter: showing signal links (candidate hidden); hidden candidate links=0. Show candidate links
Paul's Scarlet appears in a 1950 Daniels Nursery catalog page of roses for northern landscape planting. The catalog gives only a short description. It calls the cultivar a striking red rose, “sometimes called” the reddest rose that grows. The flowers are large and long lasting. [S1]
The source does not give parentage, breeder, release date, or a detailed botanical description for Paul's Scarlet. It also does not identify a species or hybrid class beyond the page's general rose context. [S1]
Daniels describes the roses on this page as hardy, field-grown, two-year-old nursery stock for the rugged climate of the Northwest, including Minnesota and the Dakotas. The same page says all listed roses need winter protection. The hardiness evidence should therefore be read as regional nursery suitability with protection, not proof of unprotected prairie hardiness. [S1]
This source covers ornamental roses, not edible fruit cultivars. Paul's Scarlet is useful to Pomologica mainly as a cold-region nursery catalog record, not as evidence for a fruiting perennial grown for human food. [S1]
Summary source basis
This summary currently draws chiefly from Daniels planting guide, 1950, with 1 additional supporting sources linked below.
Selected source quotations
“PAUL'S SCARLET (Orange Scarlet)—The popular new shade. Avigorous climber on single stems. Our best climber.”
— Planting time, 1950 / Alpha Nursery, p5
“PAUL'S SCARLET — Sometimes called “The reddest rose that grows.” Large, long lasting flowers.”
— Daniels planting guide, 1950, p12
Direct parent cultivars
Parentage claim text
Derived or downstream cultivar links
Source-story quotations
Taxonomy context: No family-tree context surfaced yet.
Related cultivars mentioned in source context
Zone assertions are structured rows. Hardiness claim text appears in evidence claims and page-linked citations.
| Zone Min | Zone Max | Zone Text | Assertion Type | Outcome | Location | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No explicit zone assertion rows yet. | ||||||
No linked media assets.
| Document | Title/URL | Rights | Claims | Relationships | History Events | Pages | Snippets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 106 | Daniels planting guide, 1950 | unknown | 3 | 0 | 0 | p12 | Flowers are described as long lasting.; Large flowers.; Sometimes called "The reddest rose that grows." |
| 139 | Planting time, 1950 / Alpha Nursery | unknown | 3 | 0 | 0 | p5 | Alpha Nursery calls Paul's Scarlet their best climber.; Vigorous climber on single stems.; Orange scarlet, described as a popular new shade. |
| Document | Page | Claim Type | Claim | Quote | Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 139 | p5 | recommendation_context | Alpha Nursery calls Paul's Scarlet their best climber. | PAUL'S SCARLET (Orange Scarlet)—The popular new shade. Avigorous climber on single stems. Our best climber. | page_block:0.90 |
| 139 | p5 | growth_habit | Vigorous climber on single stems. | PAUL'S SCARLET (Orange Scarlet)—The popular new shade. Avigorous climber on single stems. Our best climber. | page_block:0.90 |
| 139 | p5 | description_snippet | Orange scarlet, described as a popular new shade. | PAUL'S SCARLET (Orange Scarlet)—The popular new shade. Avigorous climber on single stems. Our best climber. | page_block:0.90 |
| 106 | p12 | keeping_quality | Flowers are described as long lasting. | PAUL'S SCARLET — Sometimes called “The reddest rose that grows.” Large, long lasting flowers. | page_block:0.90 |
| 106 | p12 | description_snippet | Large flowers. | PAUL'S SCARLET — Sometimes called “The reddest rose that grows.” Large, long lasting flowers. | page_block:0.90 |
| 106 | p12 | anecdote_snippet | Sometimes called "The reddest rose that grows." | PAUL'S SCARLET — Sometimes called “The reddest rose that grows.” Large, long lasting flowers. | page_block:0.90 |
| Year | Nursery | Catalog Issue | Relation |
|---|---|---|---|
| No catalog issue offerings linked. | |||
| Relation | Type | ID | Label |
|---|---|---|---|
| No linked entities at this filter level. | |||
| Type | Claim | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| recommendation_context | Alpha Nursery calls Paul's Scarlet their best climber. | 0.95 |
| growth_habit | Vigorous climber on single stems. | 0.96 |
| description_snippet | Orange scarlet, described as a popular new shade. | 0.95 |
| keeping_quality | Flowers are described as long lasting. | 0.94 |
| description_snippet | Large flowers. | 0.90 |
| anecdote_snippet | Sometimes called "The reddest rose that grows." | 0.95 |
| ID | Type | Year | Label |
|---|---|---|---|
| No history events. | |||