BARMACREME – apricot-pink hybrid tea rose - Barth
Let BARMACREME bring a sense of coastal refreshment to your garden: large, pastel apricot-pink blooms on an upright, compact bush that fits easily into smaller UK family plots. Its dense, mid-green foliage and strong, classic rose scent create a sheltered nook where you can imagine tea after a windswept walk, enjoying a rose that copes serenely with brisk sea breezes and careful drainage in heavier soils. As an own-root plant, it offers reassuring stability, regenerating well from the base and building long-term resilience instead of relying on a graft. Plant once and look forward to a gentle arc of development, with roots establishing in year one, top growth and shape in year two, and full ornamental impact by year three. In a generous 40–50 litre container or a narrow border it rewards regular watering and light pruning with repeat flowering, producing XL, cupped blooms that feel quietly luxurious yet surprisingly undemanding, ideal for beginners who still want a touch of seaside elegance.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Small coastal front garden bed |
The compact, upright habit and dense foliage create a tidy, wind-aware structure that suits exposed Cornish or Devon frontage, while repeat XL blooms deliver continuous colour in a modest space for the beginner coastal gardener. |
| Large container on a veranda (40–50 litres) |
A sizeable pot gives its own-root system room to anchor and regulate moisture, supporting long-term health and generous flowers beside outdoor seating, without complicated care routines for the busy veranda owner. |
| Feature rose in a narrow mixed border |
The slender, upright framework and medium spread slot neatly into slim borders, where the large, cupped blooms stand out amongst grasses and perennials, avoiding overcrowding yet still making a focal point for the space-conscious homeowner. |
| “Girly” pastel seaside planting with shingle mulch |
Soft cream and peach-pink petals echo shells and bleached pebbles, pairing beautifully with sea kale and blue fescue, while good root anchoring helps it sit securely in shingle-style beds for the coastal-theme enthusiast. |
| Relaxed tea corner near a seating area |
The strong but not overpowering classic fragrance suits close-up enjoyment without becoming cloying, setting a calm, refined atmosphere around a small table for the afternoon-tea lover. |
| Long-term own-root rose investment |
Without a graft union to manage, the shrub matures steadily, rebuilding from the base if cut back by weather or pruning, offering a reassuringly long ornamental lifespan for the forward-planning gardener. |
| Season-long colour with simple routine care |
Its well-repeating flowering ensures waves of large blooms from early summer onwards, needing only basic feeding and occasional pest checks, matching limited time and energy for the busy family gardener. |
| Sheltered spot in heavier clay soil |
In coastal clay, thoughtful soil preparation and reliable drainage allow the own-root plant to anchor deeply and cope calmly with wind and rain, supporting stable growth for the weather-aware gardener. |
Styling ideas
- Pastel Promenade – Combine BARMACREME with blue Festuca and sea kale over light shingle for a soft, beach-walk palette – ideal for coastal-style lovers seeking a “girly”, seaside-inspired frontage.
- Veranda Retreat – Plant one bush in a 40–50 litre container with trailing thyme and gravel top-dressing to frame a bistro set – perfect for beginners wanting fragrance and colour beside outdoor seating.
- Cream Tea Corner – Underplant with lavender and woodland sage near a small table to weave scent layers around the strong rose perfume – suited to homeowners who enjoy slow weekend tea outdoors.
- Pastel Hedgelet – Line a short path with evenly spaced plants for a low, fragrant border that stays upright and elegant – for families wanting structure without tall, high-maintenance hedges.
- Shell Garden Focus – Use a single specimen among pale pebbles, white pots and soft grasses to echo seashell tones in a compact area – attractive to urban gardeners craving a coastal mood on a balcony or patio.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Barmacreme is a hybrid tea rose marketed as BARMACREME – apricot-pink hybrid tea rose - Barth; formal registration data are incomplete, but authenticity for this clone is verified. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by René Barth in France, 2017; parentage is not recorded. Commercial introduction and registration years are not documented, but the rose belongs to the modern hybrid tea tradition. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright bush, around 80–110 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, with moderately thorny stems and dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage providing a good backdrop for large exhibition-style blooms. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, cupped XL flowers with 40+ petals, usually borne singly on stems. The rose repeats well through the season, with the second flush also abundant under standard garden care. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Closed buds show cream with pink tips; newly opened blooms blend cream outer petals with peach-pink centres, deepening then fading softly to creamy ecru with only a gentle rosy tint at the end. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, classic rose perfume with an English-rose character, assertive enough to appreciate at seating distance but generally not overpowering, intended primarily for human enjoyment rather than cut-flower trade. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is usually sparse due to very double flowers, but occasional small, spherical hips about 10–14 mm across may develop, colouring to a bright orange-red and adding discrete late-season interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to around −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7; roughly USDA zone 6b, Swedish zone 3). Disease resistance is moderate, so basic monitoring and timely treatment against black spot, mildew and rust are recommended. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to specimen, small group or low hedge planting at around 50–95 cm spacing. Prefers fertile, well-drained soil, regular watering in containers, and light annual pruning to maintain shape and flowering. |
BARMACREME – apricot-pink hybrid tea rose - Barth offers season-long repeat blooms, refined fragrance and a compact, own-root form that matures steadily, making it a thoughtful choice for relaxed, coastal-inspired family gardens.