SOURIRE D'ORCHIDÉE – pale pink climber, rambling rose - Paul Croix
Bring a touch of coastal elegance to your garden with Sourire d’Orchidée, a pale shell-pink climber that feels perfectly at home in breezy, seaside-style spaces. Its airy, semi-double blooms appear in generous flushes from early summer, then repeat reliably to keep walls and pergolas softly flowered well into autumn. On its own roots, this rose builds a quietly resilient framework, settling in for a long life with dependable regrowth after winter or wind damage. Over time it develops a stable, well-anchored structure that copes gracefully with exposed conditions and the sort of brisk, gusty weather familiar in coastal gardens, offering reassuringly good durability. In the first year it focuses on roots, the second on stronger shoots, and by the third you can expect its full ornamental value to shine. Moderate height control and occasional health checks are usually all that is needed to keep it manageable. In small and medium family gardens it is especially effective where you want a light, romantic screen rather than a dense barrier, pairing beautifully with sea kale, ornamental grasses and lavender in shingle-inspired settings. Its restrained, fresh, apple-like scent lends a feeling of gentle freshness, while the soft, shifting colours from pale pink to near white give year-round structure a calm, serene backdrop for family life outdoors.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda windbreak |
Trained along a balustrade or light trellis, this climber creates a softly filtered screen that takes the edge off breezes without feeling heavy or oppressive, supporting family use of seating areas for longer across the season – ideal for beginners. |
| Small family garden pergola |
Its moderate vigour and airy habit allow you to cover a pergola or arch without overwhelming a modest plot, providing dappled shade and repeat flowering over summer while remaining relatively easy to keep in shape – reassuring for busy-owners. |
| Wall-trained feature near seating |
Fan-trained against a sunny wall, the pale, semi-double blooms and light fragrance create an elegant backdrop for morning tea or evening unwinding, adding height and romance using very little ground space – particularly attractive to terrace-users. |
| Shingle or gravel coastal-style border |
Planted into well-prepared soil behind a shingle or gravel strip with good drainage, it forms a long-lived framework that partners naturally with sea kale, Festuca and low lavender for a relaxed, seaside feel – well suited to coastal-lovers. |
| Low-maintenance own-root investment planting |
As an own-root climber it knits itself in firmly over time, regenerating from the base if stems are cut back by wind or weather, so the plant remains reliable and attractive for many years without complex care – ideal for long-term-owners. |
| Partially shaded side passage |
Its tolerance of partial shade means it can brighten side alleys or north-east aspects where many roses struggle, giving soft colour and structure along paths that link front and back garden spaces – a good choice for space-conscious. |
| Light, romantic screening between properties |
Used on tension wires or a slim trellis, it forms a gentle visual filter between neighbouring gardens rather than a solid barrier, keeping spaces friendly while adding a refined, almost cottage-like charm – appealing for neighbours. |
| Family-friendly wildlife corner |
The semi-double flowers offer accessible pollen, and the small, occasional hips add seasonal interest; combined with moderate disease resistance and robust anchoring in gusty, changeable weather, this suits relaxed, nature-aware families. |
Styling ideas
- Seaside-arch – Train Sourire d’Orchidée over a simple wooden arch framed by sea kale and blue Festuca for a breezy, beach-path feel – perfect for coastal-style enthusiasts.
- Veranda-screen – Use slim posts and tension wires along a deck to create a pale-pink, semi-transparent screen, underplanted with creeping thyme between shingle – ideal for compact veranda owners.
- Cottage-wall – Combine this climber on a sunny wall with pots of lavender and low herbs at the base to add romantic softness without crowding the terrace – suited to beginners seeking charm.
- Gravel-ribbon – Edge a gravel path with thyme and Knautia macedonica, letting the rose rise behind as a tall, airy accent that keeps the space light and easy to maintain – good for busy gardeners.
- Family-pergola – Cover a small pergola with this pale climber, adding simple seating and containers of ornamental grasses for movement and shade that still feels open – great for young families.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Registered as CROchetdit, marketed as Sourire d'Orchidée Rambling rose CROchetdit; ARS exhibition name Sourire d’Orchidée; climber and shrub type within the climbing rose commercial group. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Paul Croix at Pépinières et Roseraies Paul Croix, France, from seedling of ‘Age Tendre’ × unknown pollen; bred, introduced and registered in 1985 as a garden climbing rose. |
| Awards and recognition |
Gold medal and Golden Rose at Geneva International Rose Competition 1985; bronze medals at Rome, Baden-Baden and The Hague rose competitions; also entered in Monza trials the same year. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous climbing habit reaching about 300–500 cm high and 120–200 cm spread, with dense, mid-green glossy foliage and moderate prickliness, suitable for training on walls, arches and pergolas. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped flowers with around 13–15 petals, medium-sized clusters on the stems; freely remontant with an abundant second flush, providing an extended season of decorative bloom. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Shell-pink buds with pearlescent sheen open pale pink, then fade toward bone-white with faint pink edging; ARS light-pink, RHS 65D outer and 155D inner, offering soft colour shifts as flowers age. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, fresh, apple-like fragrance that complements its light colouring; the semi-double blooms open flat with exposed stamens, providing moderately pollinator-friendly access to pollen in summer. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms a light crop of small, egg-shaped hips, around 8–12 mm in diameter, with orange-red colouring; adds modest late-season interest without detracting from the plant’s primary ornamental display. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Medium resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; hardy to approximately −23 to −21 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 3, USDA 6a); tolerates heat if watered during extended dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to solitary use, pergolas, walls and park plantings; allow around 140–250 cm spacing, 0.4–0.5 plants/m² in groups; tolerates partial shade and responds well to wall-training and framework pruning. |
Sourire d'Orchidée offers romantic repeat flowering, long-lived own-root resilience and manageable growth for family gardens; consider it where you need a gentle, enduring climber that will quietly earn its place.