LA CLÉ DE LA ROSE – lilac-pink tea-hybrid rose - Ducher & Massad
Picture your seaside veranda, sheltered from wind, as you return from collecting shells and sit down with a cup of tea; at your side, LA CLÉ DE LA ROSE opens its lilac-pink blooms, cupped and elegant, its very strong old-rose fragrance drifting like a salty, sunny breeze. This hybrid tea settles reliably even in exposed, coastal-family gardens where good drainage ensures steady roots and anchoring in heavier clay. Semi-double flowers reveal golden stamens for visiting pollinators, while the own-root plant matures step by step – first building underground strength, then fuller shoots, then by the third year delivering its lasting ornamental presence with minimal fuss for busy beginners.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda container (40–50 litre) |
A sturdy 40–50 litre container gives this upright hybrid tea enough depth to anchor against brisk coastal breezes while keeping roots evenly moist yet well drained; the very strong, classic fragrance then pools around seating areas for relaxed evening use by coastal veranda owners. |
| Small front garden feature rose |
At 80–120 cm high with a neat, moderately dense framework, it fits easily into modest UK front gardens, offering elegant, lilac-pink blooms from a single specimen without crowding paths or windows, giving simple impact for busy homeowners. |
| Mixed bed with perennials |
The semi-double, cupped flowers and mid-green foliage blend well with soft-textured companions such as sea kale, Festuca or lavenders, while remontant flowering brings colour back after early perennials fade, rewarding long-season interest for hobby gardeners. |
| Pollinator-friendly family border |
Semi-double flowers with visible stamens offer accessible pollen, so bees can still work the blooms while you enjoy a refined hybrid tea form, making it a good choice where ornamental value must balance wildlife support for family garden creators. |
| Sheltered, salt-tolerant shingle planting |
In coastal shingle beds with improved drainage, its upright habit and moderate spread sit comfortably behind low gravel planting, coping well when exposed to brisk, salty, windy, sunny weather typical of UK shores, reassuring cautious coastal-style lovers. |
| Season-long cut flower supply |
The solitary, long-stemmed blooms and classic hybrid tea form suit home cutting, while remontant flowering delivers flush after flush through the season, allowing regular vases indoors from a small planting for home flower arrangers. |
| Climate-conscious replacement planting |
Own-root stock with moderate disease resistance to black spot and powdery mildew supports longer-lived shrubs that bounce back if cut back hard, making it a thoughtful, climate-conscious update when refreshing tired roses for environmentally aware gardeners. |
| Low-fuss long-term garden framework |
With H7 hardiness to around -20 °C, an upright, manageable structure and own-root resilience, the shrub knits into the garden year after year with only moderate maintenance, suiting those wanting reliable structure without complex regimes for beginners and improvers. |
Styling ideas
- Shingle Chic – tuck into a shingle bed with sea kale and low grasses for a relaxed, salt-kissed look – ideal for coastal-style lovers wanting soft colour without fussy layouts
- Veranda Retreat – plant in a deep 50 litre pot by a windbreak, pairing with lavender for scent layers – perfect for coastal veranda owners creating a calm tea corner
- Lilac Ribbon – use at 55 cm spacings as a low ribbon through a front border – suited to homeowners seeking neat structure and easy, season-long colour
- Pollinator Drift – weave among Anemone ‘Fantasy Belle’ and pink lupins to mix romance with bee appeal – great for families encouraging wildlife in a small garden
- Cottage Cuttings – grow three plants together for a steady supply of scented stems to cut – appealing to hobby gardeners who love home-grown vase flowers
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
La Clé de la Rose hybrid tea rose; current trade name as listed, group Hybrid Tea, exhibition hybrid tea for cutting and garden display; marketed in the vivianaROSE ORIGINAL 2-litre own-root format. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in France by Fabien Ducher and Dominique Massad, Roseraie Ducher / Roses Massad; introduced and registered in 2016, with commercial launch through Roseraie Ducher before wider distribution. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright shrub reaching around 80–120 cm in height with a 50–70 cm spread; moderately dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage, medium prickliness, forming a tidy bush suitable for beds and specimen planting. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cupped hybrid tea blooms, usually borne singly on stems; 13–25 petals, large-flowered class (about 7–10 cm), remontant with a particularly abundant second flush in suitable garden conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Buds dark purplish-pink; newly opened flowers rich purplish-pink, then softening to deep lilac-pink with slightly darker petal edges and a silvery veil as they age; ARS dp, RHS 64C outer and 64B inner petals. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very strong, garden-filling fragrance in a classic old-rose, damask style; designed to be noticeable in the open air around seating areas, and well suited to gardeners who prioritise scent in small spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional ellipsoid hips, about 10–14 mm, orange-red when ripe; generally incidental to ornamental use but may add minor late-season interest and light wildlife value in less tidily managed borders. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately -21 to -18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); resistant to powdery mildew and black spot, with moderate rust susceptibility; benefits from standard preventative care where disease pressure is high. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds or large containers; space 50–90 cm depending on use, 3.3–3.8 plants/m² for mass effects; medium maintenance with occasional plant protection; ensure good drainage, especially on heavier UK clays. |
LA CLÉ DE LA ROSE offers very strong fragrance, remontant flowering and manageable upright growth on durable own-root stock, making it a thoughtful choice for long-lived, low-fuss garden structure you can enjoy for many seasons.