NEPTUNE – mauve-lilac hybrid tea rose – Tom Carruth
Bring a touch of coastal elegance to your garden with NEPTUNE, a mauve‑lilac hybrid tea whose luminous, sea‑mist tones and strong perfume feel perfectly at home beside shingle, salt-sprayed fences and glazed veranda pots. Its large, high‑centred blooms hold their colour remarkably well, so even in full sun you enjoy enduring lavender petals with a smoky violet rim, creating a sense of calm luxury against pebbles, decking and weathered timber. Bred for very good disease resistance, it fits effortlessly into busy family gardens where you need impact without constant fuss. In coastal regions it establishes compact, upright growth that copes reliably with wind and weather while still appreciating thoughtful drainage and watering that suit exposed, seaside plots prone to heavy rain and careful water management. As an own‑root rose it offers impressive longevity and the reassuring ability to regenerate if ever cut back hard, so its ornamental value remains stable over time. In a large 40–50 litre container on a sunny veranda, its glossy dark foliage and exhibition‑style flowers create a sanctuary for quiet tea after a blustery beach walk. Year by year it moves from quietly rooting in its first season, through bolder top growth in the second, to its full, showpiece presence and reliable repeat flowering by the third, giving you an easy-care, long‑lived rose that feels naturally at home beside the sea.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda container, 40–50 litre pot |
Large containers give NEPTUNE enough root space to thrive while making watering straightforward in windy, drying conditions; its upright, bushy habit and good disease resistance keep it looking refined yet low maintenance for busy veranda owners |
| Feature rose by seating area or tea corner |
The extra-large, high-centred lavender blooms and strong, citrus-rose fragrance create a luxurious focal point beside a bench or bistro set, turning everyday breaks into a gentle ritual for garden relaxation seekers |
| Small mixed bed in a family garden |
Its compact, erect growth slips easily into modest borders without overwhelming neighbouring plants, while repeat flowering keeps colour and structure going across the season for space-conscious homeowners |
| Wind-sheltered coastal shingle or gravel bed |
Placed in a slightly sheltered niche with sensible drainage, NEPTUNE anchors a coastal-style planting that still copes reliably with blustery, salt-tinged weather and periods of heavy rain for seaside garden enthusiasts |
| Own-root long-term specimen in front garden |
As an own-root rose it avoids the unpredictability of graft suckers, building a stable framework that can regenerate after hard pruning and deliver many years of consistent display for long-horizon planners |
| Low-effort rose border for beginners |
Very good resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust means less spraying, fewer complex routines and more time simply enjoying the flowers, ideal where gardening has to fit around everyday life for time-pressed beginners |
| Cutting patch for home arrangements |
The long, straight stems, exhibition-style form and colour-fast petals make NEPTUNE particularly rewarding for home cutting, providing vasefuls of scented, mauve-lilac blooms over a long season for informal flower arrangers |
| Partner planting with sea kale, Festuca or lavender |
Its refined, cool-toned flowers sit beautifully against silvery foliage, ornamental grasses and low, drought-tolerant perennials, balancing softness and structure in coastal schemes attuned to careful water management for styling-focused gardeners |
Styling ideas
- Sea-View Veranda Pot – Plant NEPTUNE alone in a 50 litre, pale stone-effect container with gravel mulch and a low Festuca ring for a calm, maritime accent – suited to balcony and veranda owners.
- Shingle Drift Border – Set NEPTUNE among sea kale, sweet alyssum and rounded pebbles to echo a soft, tidal shoreline – ideal for coastal-style enthusiasts.
- Lavender Tea Corner – Flank a bistro set with two NEPTUNE specimens underplanted with compact Lavandula to blend fragrance and colour – perfect for evening tea drinkers.
- Front-Garden Showcase – Use a single NEPTUNE as a gateway focal point, backed by dark evergreen shrubs to highlight its mauve blooms – for house-proud homeowners.
- Cutting-Row Ribbon – Line a narrow bed with NEPTUNE at recommended spacing for easy access to long-stemmed, vase-ready blooms – for home floristry hobbyists.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as WEKhilpurnil; marketed as NEPTUNE – mauve-lilac hybrid tea rose – Tom Carruth, a premium gold-rated vivianaROSE ORIGINAL 2-litre own-root cultivar. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Tom Carruth for Weeks Wholesale Rose Grower, USA, from (‘Blueberry Hill’ × ‘Stephen’s Big Purple’) × ‘Blue Nile’; introduced 2003 with later protection in the USA and Australia. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recipient of a Rose Hills Gold Medal at the Rose Hills International Rose Trials in Whittier, USA, recognising its combined garden performance and high exhibition-quality flowering. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright hybrid tea with moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickliness; forms an elegant clump suitable for specimen planting, beds and larger containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Very large, double, high-centred blooms with 26–39 petals on long, straight stems; clustered inflorescences of around three to five flowers, repeating strongly through the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Lavender–mauve flowers with smoky violet-lilac rim, ARS MP, RHS 62C/62D; petals show excellent fade resistance, maintaining their cool-toned character even in strong sun with only modest lightening. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, distinct fragrance combining classic rose-citrus with mild fruity notes; large, scented blooms attract bees and butterflies, though forage is limited by the very double form. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms small hips around 5–10 mm diameter; ornamental effect is minimal, as the plant is primarily valued for its repeat-flowering, exhibition-style blooms rather than autumn hip display. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Good resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H6, Swedish Zone 3, USDA 6b) with moderate tolerance of heat and short dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in fertile, well-drained soil with regular watering in prolonged drought; suitable for beds, specimens, cutting and large containers, spaced 40–95 cm depending on design intent. |
NEPTUNE – mauve-lilac hybrid tea rose – Tom Carruth offers repeat flowering, strong fragrance and durable garden performance on a dependable own-root framework; consider it if you seek a refined, long-lived feature for your outdoor space.