PRINCE JARDINIER® – pale pink hybrid tea rose – Meilland
Imagine settling down with afternoon tea on a sun-warmed veranda, sheltered behind the soft pastel blooms of Prince Jardinier®, a rose that brings a sense of coastal refreshment to compact family gardens. Bred as a premium hybrid tea, it offers XL, exhibition-quality flowers on a reliably upright framework that fits comfortably into borders, narrow beds and shingle planting. Its very strong, lingering fragrance carries beautifully on breezy Cornish or Devon afternoons, while dense, glossy foliage helps the plant stand steady in wind-exposed spots where well-prepared soil ensures good drainage and root anchoring even on heavier clay. Grown on its own roots, Prince Jardinier® develops steadily, with roots in the first year, shoots and structure in the second, and full ornamental value from the third, giving confident long-term continuity. In a 40–50 litre container or a small coastal bed, its repeat-flowering habit extends the season, offering months of soft, milky pastel colour and refined presence with only straightforward, routine maintenance.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Feature rose by a coastal veranda or terrace |
Prince Jardinier® delivers extra-large, pale pink blooms with a long flowering season, giving a gentle focal point close to seating areas and windows, while well-prepared, free‑draining soil helps it cope with breezy, shingle-style coastal planting for coastal veranda owners. |
| Statement container on balcony or small patio |
In a 40–50 litre pot this hybrid tea forms a neat, upright plant with dense foliage and plenty of long stems for flowers, ideal where borders are limited and you want maximum impact from minimal space and simple care for busy urban gardeners. |
| Cutting patch for fragrant home bouquets |
Originally bred as an exhibition-quality cut rose, it produces long, straight stems with high-centred, very double blooms that last well in the vase, so a small row in the garden can supply elegant, perfumed flowers throughout summer for home flower arrangers. |
| Single specimen in a mixed family border |
Planted at 75 cm spacing, it stands out as a refined centrepiece among perennials and grasses, its soft pastel pink harmonising easily with coastal-style companions such as sea kale, Festuca and Lavandula, without overpowering other plants for informal border planners. |
| Small hedge or linear wind-filter along a path |
At 40–50 cm spacing, the upright habit and dense, glossy foliage knit into a low, visually light screen that filters rather than blocks wind, giving privacy and shelter while still allowing views, particularly useful in exposed family gardens for practical hedge users. |
| Long-term structural rose in a clay-based garden |
With moderate disease resistance and hardy performance down to typical UK winter lows, this own-root rose can settle deeply into improved clay soil, building a stable framework that responds well to regular pruning over many years for low-intervention gardeners. |
| Romantic “girly” corner near seating or play areas |
The soft, milky-translucent pink and rounded, very full blooms create a gentle, romantic mood that sits perfectly beside shingle, pale decking and pastel cushions, adding a touch of formality without feeling stiff for soft-colour enthusiasts. |
| Fragrant focal point by doors, gates or paths |
The very strong, long-lasting scent is best enjoyed close up, so positioning near a frequently used doorway or along a path lets the perfume catch you in passing, especially on warm, breezy afternoons that evoke salty, sunny coastal days for scent-loving visitors. |
Styling ideas
- Coastal-Veranda Screen – line a veranda edge with Prince Jardinier® and low sea kale and Festuca for a shingle-inspired, salt-tolerant screen – ideal for coastal veranda owners seeking soft privacy.
- Pastel-Cut Patch – devote a sunny strip to three or five bushes for a steady supply of pale pink, strongly scented stems – perfect for home florists who love arranging their own bouquets.
- Clay-Garden Anchor – improve a clay bed with grit and compost, then use Prince Jardinier® as the structural rose among hardy perennials – suited to family gardeners wanting long-term stability.
- Romantic-Patio Pot – plant a single rose in a 40–50 litre container with trailing thyme at the base for an easy-care, “girly” patio focus – great for beginners with limited borders.
- Soft-Border Ribbon – repeat-plant along a path with Santolina and lavender cotton for a pale, airy edge that flowers for months – appealing to coastal-style lovers planning relaxed garden walks.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as MEItroni, marketed as Prince Jardinier® PERFUMELLA® MEItroni; exhibition name Francis Meilland; part of the PERFUMELLA® collection for strongly scented roses. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in France in 1996 by Alain Antoine Meilland from (‘Wimi’ × ‘Rouge Meilland’) × ‘Margaret Merril’; introduced commercially after 2007 by Meilland International SA. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated scented rose with multiple 2006 awards, including fragrance and aesthetic prizes at Buenos Aires, Le Roeulx and Baden-Baden, plus ADR certification (2008) and Gold Standard gold certification (2009). |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Medium-tall, upright bush 110–150 cm high and 60–85 cm wide, moderately thorny, with dense, dark green, glossy foliage; spent flowers benefit from deadheading as self‑cleaning is not documented. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, high-centred hybrid tea blooms with 40+ petals, usually borne singly on long stems; extra-large flowers, especially suitable for cutting, with strong remontancy and a notably abundant second flush. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft, pale pink blooms with creamy undertones; buds pastel pink with a silky sheen, opening to clear pink rosettes that gradually fade towards an almost whitish-pink, maintaining an elegant, powdery pastel impression. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Exceptionally strong, long-lasting perfume; precise scent notes are not specified, but international fragrance awards confirm a pronounced, high-quality scent that is best appreciated near seating or paths. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms moderately abundant, small spherical hips 8–12 mm across, coloured orange-red; hips develop if flowers are left uncut and not deadheaded towards the end of the season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 3, USDA 6b); disease resistance moderate to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, responding well to standard preventative care and good airflow. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; allow 40–75 cm spacing depending on purpose; needs regular feeding, pruning and deadheading to maintain health and flowering, especially when grown for cutting. |
Prince Jardinier® combines exhibition-quality pastel blooms, strong fragrance and a compact, structural habit in a long-lived own-root form that rewards straightforward care, making it a thoughtful choice for your next coastal-inspired planting.