CHRISTOPHE DECHAVANNE ® – cream-coloured hybrid tea rose
This Perfumella® hybrid tea offers elegance and dependable garden structure in a classic, upright bush, ideal for compact British front gardens and cottage-style borders. Its XL, high-centred blooms bring true cut-flower quality straight from your own beds, producing long, straight stems that are easy to arrange indoors. The strong, rich-fruity fragrance lingers in the air and in the vase, so even a small group has real impact around the house. Medium maintenance needs and moderate disease tolerance suit hobby gardeners who can manage simple seasonal care. As an own-root rose it develops a durable, balanced framework, regenerating well and building a long-lived bush over time. Planted in well-prepared soil with good drainage, it copes steadily with typical British rain and wind in exposed spots. Over its first seasons it follows a natural development arc – roots in year one, fuller shoots in year two, and confident, showy flowering by year three – rewarding patient gardeners with an enduring, premium presence in the family garden.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point |
The tall, bushy habit and XL, high-centred blooms create a clear vertical accent near doors, paths or bay windows, giving classic hybrid tea poise in small family plots without overwhelming the space, appealing to the style-conscious beginner |
| Cutting patch or cutting row |
Long, straight stems and exhibition-type flowers make this cultivar highly suitable for home cutting, so a short row supplies vases throughout the season with consistently shaped, premium-looking blooms, satisfying the home-focused gardener |
| Small mixed bed with perennials |
The moderate spread and dense foliage fit neatly among cottage perennials, with the soft cream–peach flowers blending rather than clashing, ideal for those wanting structured roses woven into existing planting, suiting the cottage-leaning owner |
| Edging or low rose hedge |
Recommended close planting distances allow it to form an even, scented edging or informal low hedge, giving a tidy, repeated line of colour and perfume along drives or front boundaries for the order-loving garden planner |
| Single specimen in a feature bed |
Planted alone at the centre of a small bed, the upright, bushy form and repeat flowering create a dependable “one-rose statement” that remains visually coherent year after year as the own-root plant matures, pleasing the low-effort householder |
| Part-shade side garden |
This cultivar tolerates partial shade, making it useful along side paths or lightly shaded front aspects where full-sun roses may struggle, yet it still offers repeat blooms and scent, reassuring the space-limited urban resident |
| Raised bed on heavier soils |
In raised beds above heavier clays, its bushy framework and moderate disease resistance respond well to good drainage, helping it cope with the combination of wet weather and blustery conditions often found in exposed UK plots, supporting the practical-minded buyer |
| Large container by the front door |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container, the vertical habit and strong perfume bring a “cut-flower vase” effect straight to the doorstep, while own-root resilience supports long-term re-shaping and renewal with simple pruning for the convenience-seeking garden enthusiast |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Column – Plant three in a loose triangle with lavender and hardy geraniums to frame a path, using the upright structure and repeat blooms as a soft, scented column – ideal for romantic front-garden owners
- Cream Border – Combine with white foxgloves, nepeta and soft grasses, letting the cream–peach flowers provide calm focal points in a cool-toned border – suited to those preferring restrained, elegant schemes
- Doorstep Welcome – Grow one plant in a 50 litre pot with trailing ivy and seasonal bedding at the base, giving a tall, fragrant accent by the front door – perfect for busy homeowners who want instant impact
- Cutting Corner – Group four to five plants in a sunny bed, underplant with low catmint, and treat the area as a mini cutting patch for regular indoor arrangements – attractive for practical gardeners who enjoy home-cut flowers
- Structured Screen – Plant a short row along a drive or path, interspersed with evergreen box or low dogwood, using the uniform bushy habit to create a neat, scented screen – ideal for those seeking an orderly yet soft boundary
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as MEIbarbaru, marketed as Christophe Dechavanne ® Perfumella® MEIbarbaru; premium silver-rated own-root plant supplied in 2-litre pharmaROSA® ORIGINAL containers. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Michèle Meilland-Richardier, Meilland International, France; bred 2012, introduced and registered 2014 by Meilland Richardier, with parentage recorded as unknown in available sources. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub 80–120 cm high and 40–65 cm wide, with dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a well-filled, balanced framework as it matures on its own roots. |
| Flower morphology |
Large XL, double flowers with 26–39 petals, solitary on stems, high-centred and pointed like classic cut roses, remontant with a generous second flush when well fed and watered through the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft cream with a delicate peachy tone; buds pale cream with a peach tint, opening vanilla-yellow at the centre, then fading to cream–ivory, giving an overall light cream–honey peach effect in full bloom. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Rich, fruity perfume of strong intensity, rated as a long-lasting scented rose both outdoors and as a cut flower, adding notable aroma value around paths, seating areas and doors in small to medium gardens. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose hips form only occasionally; double flowers reduce set, but when present they are small, spherical, red hips about 8–12 mm in diameter, appearing sparsely and not a dominant ornamental feature. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Moderate disease resistance, with average tolerance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C, corresponding to RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3 and USDA Zone 6b conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, edging, hedging and cut-flower use; allow 35–55 cm spacing; medium maintenance with periodic protection where fungal pressure is high; prefers well-drained soil and regular feeding. |
CHRISTOPHE DECHAVANNE ® offers tall, elegant, strongly fragrant blooms and reliable cutting quality on a long-lived own-root bush, making it a thoughtful choice for gardeners seeking classic roses with manageable care needs.