Rivedoux-plage™ Les Provençelles® MASripla – golden-yellow shrub rose
Bring coastal charm to your front garden with Rivedoux-plage™, a compact, bushy shrub rose whose golden-yellow, pink-edged blooms create a warm cottage feel from early summer onwards. Its dense, glossy mid-green foliage forms a tidy structure that suits small beds and narrow borders, giving you an ordered, flowering look without complex design work. Bred in southern France, it tolerates heat and short dry spells reliably, needing only sensible watering during prolonged drought and in free-draining soil that copes better with coastal wind and rain. The cupped, very full flowers repeat well, offering a generous display in their second flush, while the plant’s own-root form builds a durable lifespan and recovers more steadily from winter or pruning. Over time, you can expect a natural rhythm of year-one rooting, year-two leafy growth and year-three full ornamental impact that fits neatly into the typical family garden.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden focal shrub |
Its compact, bushy habit and dense, glossy foliage make Rivedoux-plage™ ideal as a focal shrub by the path or beside the front door, giving clear structure without dominating a small space; perfect for homeowners seeking neat, welcoming colour for visitors. |
| Small mixed border in family gardens |
The moderate height and 50–80 cm spread slot easily into narrow borders with perennials and grasses, delivering a repeat-flowering golden-yellow accent that looks deliberate rather than overpowering, well suited to busy gardeners who want straightforward, reliable border interest for family. |
| Cottage-style bed with soft colour transitions |
The flowers shift from vivid golden yellow to creamy, sandy tones with pinkish and peach edging, blending gently with blues and mauves in a cottage mix, ideal for those who enjoy classic, romantic colour progressions through the season for atmosphere. |
| Heat-exposed urban front gardens |
Bred in the Mediterranean, this rose copes well with reflected heat from paving and walls, provided it receives regular watering in longer dry spells, making it a sound choice for sun-baked, small town or city front gardens managed by time-pressed urban owners. |
| Low-maintenance specimen in lawn or gravel |
As an own-root shrub with a long potential lifespan, it forms a stable, balanced plant that responds predictably to simple yearly pruning, giving an organised, colourful presence in lawn or gravel without complex care, reassuring for inexperienced yet design-conscious gardeners. |
| Medium container on terrace or doorstep |
In a large 40–50 litre container with good drainage, its compact frame and repeat flowering provide a contained burst of colour where soil is limited, suiting renters or balcony users who want a moveable, long-lived rose without committing to permanent beds for now. |
| Border planting in exposed, windy positions |
The rounded, bushy growth and relatively low stature help it stand up to breezier sites, where heavier pruning and sturdy companions give extra shelter, making it a practical option for modestly exposed gardens looking for colour that withstands blustery British weather for households. |
| Structured rose group of 3–5 plants |
Planted in a small group at recommended spacing, the uniform habit produces a coherent, hedge-like band of colour and foliage that matures steadily over several seasons, ideal for front-garden designs where a clearly defined, long-term rose feature is desired by style-focused beginners. |
Styling ideas
- Coastal-front – Combine Rivedoux-plage™ with glaucous sedge and gravel mulch for a light, seaside feel – for urban and suburban gardeners seeking a relaxed yet organised front-garden look.
- Cottage-drift – Thread it through clumps of Campanula carpatica and soft pink perennials for a loose, romantic border – for those who love traditional cottage gardens without strict formality.
- Golden-ribbon – Plant a short row along a path, underplanted with low saxifrage and thyme, to create a tidy flowering edge – for families wanting clear structure and easy mowing lines.
- Doorstep-glow – Grow one plant in a 40–50 litre terracotta pot with trailing herbs to frame the entrance – for busy homeowners wanting instant kerb appeal with simple care.
- Evening-niche – Use its soft fragrance and warm tones near a seating area, mixed with pale grasses for gentle twilight colour – for those who unwind outdoors after work in compact gardens.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Modern shrub rose, exhibition shrub; registered as MASripla, traded as Rivedoux-plage™ Les Provençelles® MASripla; named after Rivedoux-Plage on the Atlantic coast of France. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Dominique Massad at Atelier-Jardin Dominique Massad, Allauch, France; introduced and registered in 2013, initially distributed by Pétales de Roses with unknown parentage. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact, bushy shrub reaching 100–140 cm in height and 50–80 cm spread, with dense, mid-green glossy foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a well-filled, upright, structural garden plant. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, cupped, very full double flowers with 40+ petals, produced mainly in clustered trusses; remontant habit provides a generous second flush of blooms under suitable garden conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Golden-yellow petals with pink-tinged edges (RHS 14A outer, 55B inner), shifting to creamy, sandy and peach tones as they age; colour retention is good, creating subtle, evolving bicolour displays. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Soft, discreet fragrance with mild intensity, offering gentle perfume at close range rather than a room-filling scent; best appreciated along paths, entrances, and near well-used seating areas. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces spherical orange-red hips around 8–12 mm in diameter, appearing moderately after flowering; hips can add a light ornamental touch in late season if spent blooms are not removed. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy approximately to -18 to -21 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 3, USDA 6b); disease susceptibility high, so regular protection is advised; tolerates heat reasonably but needs watering during long droughts. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with good air circulation; space at 35–65 cm depending on use, aiming for 5.7–6.5 plants/m² in mass plantings; maintain preventive care regime due to high susceptibility to fungal diseases. |
Rivedoux-plage™ Les Provençelles® MASripla offers compact structure, evolving golden-yellow colour and a long-lived own-root shrub form that settles reliably into family gardens, making it a thoughtful choice when planning your next front-garden rose.