DOMAINE DITTIÈRE – crimson-red hybrid tea rose – Dittière
After a breezy walk on the shingle, DOMAINE DITTIÈRE welcomes you home with crimson blooms that feel perfectly at ease in sheltered, coastal-style gardens, where wind and rain meet good drainage and firm anchoring. This hybrid tea keeps a classic, high-centred shape and XL flowers for cutting, so you can enjoy vasefuls of long-stemmed beauty with minimal fuss. Its strong, damask-style fragrance lingers in salty air, while own-root robustness supports a long-lived planting that shrugs off typical family-garden pressures. In year one it concentrates on roots, year two brings confident new shoots, and by year three it settles into reliable, repeat flowering that feels effortlessly at home on a balcony, veranda or compact coastal terrace.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Feature rose near a coastal veranda seating area |
The strong, classic damask scent carries well in breezy air, giving you a fragrant backdrop to evening tea and weekend gatherings without demanding complicated care routines, ideal for scent-loving coastal veranda users and beginners. |
| Cutting patch in a small family back garden |
High-centred, exhibition-style blooms on upright stems make it easy to cut long, straight flowers for the house, so even a modest bed can double as a home cutting garden for busy but style-conscious homeowners. |
| Statement pot on a sheltered balcony or terrace |
Its bushy, upright habit suits a single large container of at least 40–50 litres, where good drainage and a stable base give it reliable structure for compact urban or coastal balcony gardeners. |
| Rose bed focal point in a mixed border |
The deep, velvety crimson colour holds its richness as the flower ages, helping it stand out among perennials and grasses so you gain a long-season focal point with very little extra work for colour-driven gardeners. |
| Specimen rose in a front garden display |
An upright, moderately thorny bush with medium green foliage forms a tidy structure that reads as smart but not formal, giving kerb appeal that stays attractive for years with simple seasonal care, suiting time-pressed owners. |
| Wind-aware coastal planting with shingle or gravel mulch |
Planted in well-drained ground where wind and rain are frequent but soil is kept stable, it roots firmly and copes well with blustery weather, offering dependable structure for coastal-style garden makers and veranda users. |
| Mixed rose bed with moderate maintenance expectations |
Moderate disease resistance, including good black spot tolerance, means you mainly need basic hygiene and occasional protection, keeping rose-growing realistic for those who want bloom quality without intensive regimes, ideal for casual gardeners. |
| Long-term planting for a family home |
As an own-root rose it regrows reliably from the base if cut back hard or weather-damaged, maintaining flower quality and shape over many seasons, reassuring for families planning a durable, low-fuss garden investment. |
Styling ideas
- Veranda Classic – pair in a 50-litre terracotta pot with silvered Festuca and a low lavender edging for fragrance and movement – perfect for balcony and veranda relaxers.
- Crimson Spotlight – use three plants in a small front bed against pale gravel to highlight the velvety colour – ideal for homeowners seeking simple kerb appeal.
- Cutting Corner – line a sunny fence with a short row and underplant with low catmint for soft contrast and extra vase material – for hobby florists at home.
- Coastal Shingle – nestle it among sea kale and low grasses in a free-draining, gravel-mulched strip to echo a Cornish shore – suited to coastal-style enthusiasts.
- Evening Perfume – position near a seating nook with soft lighting and companion it with white Penstemon for a scented dusk palette – for after-work unwinding spaces.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as JARddom, marketed as DOMAINE DITTIÈRE – crimson-red hybrid tea rose – Dittière; premium gold quality, verified authenticity for reliable garden performance. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Jean-Pierre Dittière at Roseraie Jardirose, France; introduced 2009, with French breeding work completing in 2016; named in honour of the Domaine Dittière winery in Vauchrétien. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact upright bush, about 85–115 cm high and 45–65 cm wide, with moderately dense, matt, medium green foliage and moderate prickles, forming a tidy, vertical accent in beds or containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, high-centred hybrid tea blooms with 26–39 petals, double and exhibition-grade, borne mostly singly on stems; remontant with a notably abundant second flush in suitable conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Uniform deep crimson-red flowers, velvety in texture; buds deep burgundy, opening to rich crimson that darkens slightly with a subtle blackish-red tinge, holding colour well until petal drop. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, classic damask-style perfume with a lingering character, especially around seating height; primarily ornamental rather than pollinator-focused due to its very full, stamen-concealing blooms. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small red hips, ellipsoidal, about 6–9 mm, forming later in the season if flowers are not deadheaded; minor ornamental interest rather than a major feature of the cultivar. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 3, USDA 6b); disease resistance moderate overall, with good black spot resistance but moderate susceptibility to mildew and rust. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with free-draining soil; plant 45–85 cm apart depending on use, giving around 3.3–3.8 plants per m²; medium maintenance with occasional plant protection and regular deadheading recommended. |
DOMAINE DITTIÈRE offers velvety crimson flowers, strong damask fragrance and a compact, cut-worthy habit on a resilient own-root shrub, making it a thoughtful choice for long-lived, low-fuss planting.