CRÈME DE LA CRÈME – cream-white climbing rose - Gandy
Let Crème de la Crème frame your veranda with a veil of cream blooms and a strong, sweet fragrance that drifts in on coastal breezes. This large-flowered climbing rose is bred for resistance and long life, so you can enjoy its refined, butter-white petals without constant spraying or specialist care. On UK coasts it copes calmly with brisk weather and salt-tinged winds, provided the roots have good drainage and a firm anchor in the soil. As an own-root plant, it builds a dependable framework that regenerates well after pruning, giving a stable display year after year. In a family garden it is as practical as it is pretty: easy to train on a wall, pergola or trellis, flowering generously in early summer and again later in the season. In its first season it settles and roots, the second brings confident new shoots, and by the third it reaches its full ornamental impact as a luminous, scented backdrop for relaxed afternoons after collecting seashells.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Family pergola or seating area |
Reliable repeat flowering turns a simple pergola into a long-season backdrop for family life, with creamy-white clusters opening first, then a generous second flush as summer continues, suiting those who want colour without complex pruning – beginners |
| Coastal veranda or balcony in large container |
In a 40–50 litre container with good drainage, this climber is easy to manage on a sheltered coastal veranda, creating a refreshing, seaside feel while handling brisk, salt-laced breezes and squally showers better than fussier roses – coastal-owners |
| Low-maintenance front garden feature |
Good resistance to black spot, mildew and rust means less spraying and fewer worries, making it ideal for a smart front wall or porch arch that stays attractive with basic watering, feeding and an annual tidy – busy-homeowners |
| Long-lived wall or fence cover |
The own-root form builds a durable framework that can be pruned back hard when needed and will regrow evenly, giving a stable, long-lived screen of glossy foliage and flowers rather than a short-lived, graft-dependent plant – long-term-planners |
| Lightly shaded side passage |
Its tolerance of partial shade allows planting along side paths or north-east facing boundaries where many roses sulk, providing softly luminous flowers that lift gloomier corners without demanding constant attention – town-gardeners |
| Romantic “girly” corner with pastels |
The refined cream-white and pale lemon tones pair beautifully with soft pinks and lilacs, creating a gentle, feminine nook that still benefits from the rose’s robust health and repeat bloom rather than being high-maintenance – style-conscious |
| Cutting garden or vase flowers |
Large, double, sweetly scented blooms on strong stems are excellent for cutting; regular, moderate harvesting encourages new clusters, giving weeks of indoor fragrance from a single, easily managed climber – home-florists |
| Anchoring planting in heavy clay borders |
Once established in well-prepared clay with added drainage, the vigorous climbing habit and strong root system help anchor sloping or exposed borders while flowering above companion grasses and perennials for a balanced structure – garden-upgraders |
Styling ideas
- Seaside-arch – Train Crème de la Crème over a simple wooden arch with sea kale and blue Festuca at the base for a salty, breezy entrance – perfect for coastal veranda owners.
- Pastel-nook – Combine this cream climber with Dianthus plumarius and pale pink bedding in a small seating corner for a soft, “girly” escape – ideal for romantic stylists.
- Porch-frame – Let it climb a front porch or railings in a large container, underplanted with lavender for fragrance at two heights – suited to busy urban homeowners.
- Cutting-wall – Grow it along a sunny fence with rows of parsley and Liatris in front, creating a practical strip for scented cut flowers – good for home florists.
- Clay-border – Use as the vertical accent in a heavy-clay mixed border, paired with grasses and low perennials, relying on its resilience for long-term structure – helpful for low-maintenance planners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Large-flowered climbing rose, registered as GANcre, marketed as Crème de la crème Climbing rose GANcre; exhibition name Crème de la Crème, in the climber commercial group. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Douglas L. Gandy in the United Kingdom from ‘Morgengruss’ × ‘Whisky Mac’; introduced and registered in 1998 by Gandy’s Roses Ltd after breeding work completed in 1995. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous climbing habit reaching about 240–400 cm high with a 160–280 cm spread; moderately thorny shoots carry dense, glossy dark green foliage forming an effective vertical screen or cover. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, cup-shaped blooms with approximately 26–39 petals, borne in clusters; remontant, with a generous second flush ensuring decorative value across the main growing season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Cream-white blooms with gentle lemon-yellow shading in the centre; buds ivory with pale-yellow tips, ageing to uniform butter-white; ARS colour code W, RHS 155C and 11D, colour retention moderate. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, sweet, noticeably scented fragrance typical of classic garden roses; very double flowers mainly serve ornamental use, with limited pollinator appeal due to reduced stamen accessibility. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional spherical orange-red hips, approximately 8–13 mm in diameter, forming sparsely; a minor ornamental feature rather than a primary reason for planting this cultivar. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Good general disease resistance, rated resistant to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; reliably hardy to around −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7; roughly USDA zone 6b, Swedish zone 3). |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best on pergolas, walls or trellises at 140–220 cm spacing; suitable for partial shade; maintenance needs are low, mainly tying in new shoots, occasional deadheading and routine seasonal pruning. |
Crème de la crème Climbing rose GANcre offers long-season flowering, strong fragrance and durable, disease-resistant growth on an own-root framework, making it a thoughtful choice for an easy yet refined garden feature.