BELLE DE LA CARNIERE – pink hybrid tea rose – Ducher
Imagine returning from the seaside, sand still on your shoes, to sit behind a gentle windbreak of roses where salt-tolerant planting takes the sting out of coastal weather, giving you a calm, sunny corner for afternoon tea. BELLE DE LA CARNIERE brings refined, medium-pink hybrid-tea blooms with a lilac veil, ideal for cutting into simple vases or enjoying on the bush in an average family garden where space is at a premium. The pharmaROSA ORIGINAL 2‑litre own‑root form establishes steadily and lives long, building roots in year one, extra shoots in year two and full ornamental impact by year three, so you can plan a quietly elegant, low-fuss coastal or town veranda display.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda in large containers |
Best suited to a sheltered, sunny coastal nook where high sides or glass soften the wind, this upright hybrid tea gives tall, elegant stems for cutting; use 40–50 litre containers with sharp-draining compost so roots anchor securely in breezy conditions – ideal for time-poor beginners. |
| Feature rose beside seating area |
Its high-centred, exhibition-style flowers and neatly upright habit create a focal point by a bench or bistro set, providing easy-to-enjoy colour at eye level without needing elaborate pruning skills, as own-root plants regain shape reliably after any winter dieback – reassuring for style-conscious homeowners. |
| Small family front garden specimen |
Growing to around 100–140 cm, it fits neatly into modest front gardens, offering refined pink blooms without overwhelming the space; own-root vigour maintains long-term structure, delivering consistent ornamental value season after season with only moderate routine care – suitable for busy urban gardeners. |
| Cutting patch row in a family garden |
The solitary, long-stemmed flowers were bred with the cut-flower enthusiast in mind, so a short row provides a regular supply of classic hybrid-tea blooms for vases, while the semi-double form opens cleanly and repeat flowers into late season – appealing to creative home flower-arrangers. |
| Mixed border with perennials |
Medium-height, upright growth slots comfortably between herbaceous perennials such as peonies and bellflowers, adding vertical emphasis and a clear focal point, while the dark foliage sets off softer pastel companions for a romantic yet tidy border structure – helpful for relaxed cottage-style planters. |
| Coastal-style shingle bed or wind-sheltered strip |
Planted in free-draining soil over shingle, with irrigation focused at the base, it copes well where excess winter wet would challenge grafted roses, benefiting from own-root resilience and maintaining stable flowering even in gardens often buffeted by brisk sea breezes – practical for exposed-coast residents. |
| Informal rose grouping near patio |
At the recommended 55 cm spacing, a small group delivers a flush of coordinated pink, then a generous second wave of bloom later in the season, so you see colour for much of the summer without replanting, while medium disease resistance suits typical UK rose care – convenient for casual hosts. |
| Single statement rose in lawn or gravel |
Used as a solitary specimen at about 90 cm spacing from other shrubs, this sparsely thorned, premium-grade cultivar remains easy to approach for deadheading and cutting, and its occasional orange-red hips lend gentle autumn interest without creating heavy mess – attractive to low-maintenance-focused owners. |
Styling ideas
- Coastal-Veranda Chic – position one rose in a 50 litre tub with pale shingle mulch and a low Festuca grass skirt for a breezy, seaside look – ideal for balcony and veranda dwellers.
- Tea-and-Roses Corner – flank a small bistro set with two plants in matching containers, underplanted with lavender for scent, to create a calm spot for afternoon tea – perfect for home-working professionals.
- Romantic-Shingle Border – mix BELLE DE LA CARNIERE among sea kale, silver foliage and soft pink perennials in a drained shingle strip – suited to coastal-style enthusiasts.
- Cutting-Row Line – plant a short straight row along a path so you can snip stems on the way indoors, combining with peonies and bellflowers behind – appealing to home floristry fans.
- Front-Garden Accent – place a single specimen in gravel or low groundcover near the front door, with discreet lighting to catch the lilac-pink blooms at dusk – great for kerb-appeal seekers.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
BELLE DE LA CARNIERE, a hybrid tea rose also known as Belle de la Carnière as an approved exhibition name, marketed by Ducher within the hybrid tea rose commercial group. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Fabien Ducher in France and introduced in 2007 by Pépinières & Roseraie Ducher, this variety has undocumented parentage but reflects classic French hybrid tea breeding. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright bushy plant, typically 100–140 cm tall and 70–95 cm wide, with medium-density dark green foliage, sparsely thorned stems and a habit suitable for feature planting or small groups. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, high-centred, pointed-budded flowers in a classic cut-rose style, usually solitary on stems, large-sized at approximately 2.75–3.95 inches, with remontant, abundant repeat flowering. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Medium pink with lilac tint; buds deep pink, opening warm coral-pink centrally, then lightening with a cool lavender veil before fading, giving nuanced tonal shifts through each flowering stage. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, rosy fragrance of subtle character, noticeable at close range but not overpowering, adding a gentle traditional rose scent suitable for seating areas without dominating nearby plantings. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional spherical hips, about 10–14 mm diameter, in an attractive orange-red shade, offering light ornamental autumn interest without significant self-seeding or heavy fruit load. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Medium resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3), performing reliably in typical UK winter conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny, well-drained soil with moderate maintenance; recommended spacings: 55 cm for mass planting, 50 cm for hedges, 90 cm for specimen use; occasional plant protection may be beneficial. |
BELLE DE LA CARNIERE rewards you with elegant, long-stemmed pink flowers from a compact, upright, own-root bush that matures into a stable, long-lived feature, making it a thoughtful choice if you enjoy refined roses without complexity.