VIRGO™ – white hybrid tea rose – Mallerin
Bring a sense of seaside calm to your garden with VIRGO™, a classic snow‑white hybrid tea selected for its reliability and easy‑going nature in British family plots. Its upright habit and luminous blooms create a gentle screen effect, ideal where you want a sheltered nook for tea on breezy days, while its proven longevity as an own‑root rose promises stable beauty year after year. In the first seasons it focuses on rooting deeply, then building sturdy shoots, before reaching full ornamental presence by about the third year. Plant it in a free‑draining bed or a generous 40–50‑litre container to cope gracefully with blustery showers and briny gusts in coastal gardens, giving you reliable flowers with a light, refreshing fragrance and reassuringly low maintenance needs.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small coastal front garden bed |
The upright, compact habit and good disease resistance keep this rose looking tidy in exposed, seaside front gardens, where space is tight but you still want clear white blooms that read well from the pavement, especially for the time-poor homeowner. |
| Feature rose in a 40–50 L veranda container |
In a large, well‑drained pot it anchors the planting with a single, elegant, high‑centred bloom per stem, giving an uncluttered, “designer” look that suits modern verandas and balconies without demanding complex pruning from the casual gardener. |
| Calm, white “girly” corner by a seating area |
The snow‑white flowers and mild, refreshing scent create a light, feminine mood around a bistro table or bench, pairing easily with pastel accessories and soft grasses to form a serene retreat for the relaxed beginner. |
| Cut‑flower row in a family garden |
Hybrid tea form with long, straight, exhibition‑worthy stems offers reliable, repeat pickings of classic white buds for jugs and vases, so you can enjoy home‑grown bouquets without needing a specialist cutting patch, ideal for the enthusiastic amateur. |
| Long‑term structural rose in a mixed border |
As an own‑root rose with a long lifespan and good health, it develops into a durable, upright shrub that keeps its place in the planting scheme, even if shoots are occasionally cut back hard, reassuring for the forward‑planning owner. |
| Low‑care white scheme in urban planting |
Its low–medium maintenance needs and strong resistance to black spot and powdery mildew suit busy city dwellers who want a smart, white focal point with only basic deadheading and feeding, supporting the schedule‑pressed city‑dweller. |
| Sheltered terrace with coastal planting feel |
Placed where a fence or glass balustrade softens the wind, it echoes the feel of Cornish or Devon shorelines; in a free‑draining container it copes well with brisk, salty breezes and changeable showers, perfect for the coast‑loving householder. |
| Structured rose bed with companion perennials |
The clear white blooms sit neatly above glossy foliage and repeat through the season, providing rhythm among perennials like sea kale or ornamental grasses, while self‑cleaning is weak so occasional deadheading suits the engaged but non‑expert gardener. |
Styling ideas
- Shingle‑chic – Plant VIRGO™ through light gravel with sea kale and blue Festuca to echo Cornish shingle, ideal for coastal‑style lovers who want brightness without fuss in breezy front gardens – coastal veranda owners.
- Porcelain‑patio – In a 40–50 L pale ceramic pot, underplant with soft pink Pelargoniums for a “girly” veranda look where one elegant white bloom per stem feels like a cut‑flower shop – balcony and terrace beginners.
- Ivory‑border – Use VIRGO™ as a repeating accent along a path, interplanted with lavender and dwarf baby’s‑breath to give a calm, bridal‑white border that stays formal with minimal clipping – busy family gardeners.
- Exhibition‑row – Dedicate a slim bed just for cutting, spacing plants generously so straight stems and high‑centred buds develop fully, for those who enjoy arranging home‑grown white roses – hobby florists.
- Moonlight‑corner – Combine VIRGO™ with dusky foliage such as Penstemon ‘Husker Red’ and dark containers so the snow‑white blooms glow at dusk, creating an evening tea spot – after‑work relaxers.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as Virgo; current trade name Virgo™ Hybrid tea rose Virgo; ARS approved exhibition name Virgo; formerly unnamed, with a Latin name meaning “virgin” and echoing the Virgo zodiac sign. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Charles Mallerin in France in 1947 from ‘Blanche Mallerin’ × ‘Neige Parfum’; introduced by Meilland Richardier, unregistered cultivar status, representing classic mid‑twentieth‑century hybrid tea breeding. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised with an RNS Gold Medal in 1949, confirming its quality as a reliable, exhibition‑grade hybrid tea with enduring appeal for both show benches and ornamental garden planting. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright habit, 75–105 cm tall and 70–95 cm wide, with moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickliness; forms a balanced shrub suitable for beds, borders and large containers in family gardens. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium‑sized, double, high‑centred blooms with 26–39 petals, typically solitary on stems; classic cut‑rose form with pointed buds, remontant with a generous second flush, though weak self‑cleaning means spent blooms need removal. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure white flowers with pearlescent sheen; buds greenish with creamy stripe, opening soft creamy white (RHS 155C outer, 155D inner), clearing to snow‑white, then taking on a pale ivory tint shortly before fading. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, refreshing fragrance of classic rose character; pleasantly noticeable at close range without overwhelming nearby seating areas, lending a subtle freshness suited to small patios, entrances and sheltered verandas. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set generally poor due to double flowers; occasional small, spherical hips 10–14 mm in diameter, red‑orange when ripe, of minor ornamental interest and rarely a significant feature in normal garden use. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Good resistance to powdery mildew and black spot, moderate rust susceptibility; hardy to about –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish Zone 3) when planted in well‑drained soil and given standard winter protection. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny sites; regular watering as drought tolerance is moderate. Spacing 55 cm in mass plantings, 50 cm as informal hedge, 90 cm as specimen. Square density 3.2 plants/m², hexagonal 3.7 plants/m², plus routine deadheading. |
VIRGO™ offers luminous white blooms, reliable cutting stems and low‑maintenance health on a long‑lived own‑root framework, making it a thoughtful choice for relaxed gardeners seeking enduring elegance.