TRESOR DU JARDIN – cream-pink hybrid tea rose – Adam
Elegant and classically shaped, TRESOR DU JARDIN brings exhibition-quality blooms into your own garden with a softly creamy-pink palette and a strong, fruity fragrance. This upright hybrid tea produces large, very double flowers on sturdy stems, ideal for cutting and admiring indoors as well as enjoying in the border. Its dense, dark green foliage provides a refined backdrop for the luminous flowers, fitting beautifully into cottage-style front gardens and formal layouts alike. As an own-root plant, it develops a stable, balanced bush that regenerates well over time and supports a long-lived display with modest pruning and deadheading. In typical British conditions it appreciates regular feeding and careful watering, particularly where drainage is improved on heavier soils or slightly raised beds. From its first season you see it settle, by the second it fills out with strong shoots, and by the third year it reaches its full ornamental potential, rewarding thoughtful but straightforward care. Planted near paths, seating areas or front doors, its strong scent and luminous blooms become a daily pleasure.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden specimen by the entrance |
The exhibition-style blooms, strong scent and compact, upright habit make this rose an ideal focal point by a front door or gate, giving a classic welcome without needing complex shaping, especially appealing for the beginner. |
| Small mixed cottage border |
The cream-pink flowers and dark foliage blend gently with perennials and cottage favourites, providing repeat waves of colour and fragrance through summer with simple deadheading, suiting time-pressed homeowners. |
| Cutting corner in a family garden |
Long, straight stems with large, very double blooms and a fruity scent make it excellent for vases, allowing regular cutting without spoiling the bush shape, rewarding creative but low-fuss gardeners. |
| Paired planting beside a path or terrace |
Planting two or three together creates a balanced, formal look and concentrates fragrance where you walk or sit, with the own-root structure supporting long-term reliability for style-conscious beginners. |
| Feature rose in a narrow bed |
The relatively narrow spread and upright growth allow it to shine in slimmer borders along drives or fences, where regular feeding and good air movement help maintain display quality for busy urban owners. |
| Large container on patio or balcony |
In a 40–50 litre pot with quality compost and regular watering, its tidy form and showy blooms provide a refined focal point close to the house, ideal for those seeking impact from a manageable planting. |
| Rose and perennial combination bed |
The luminous, pastel flowers sit well with airy companions like asters and obedient plant, giving layered interest and fragrance, while own-root resilience supports a long-lived framework for evolving borders. |
| Sunny, well-drained showcase position |
Placed where soil structure is improved for steady drainage and it receives full sun, the plant rewards attentive feeding and spraying with a sustained display of high-quality blooms, suiting detail-oriented enthusiasts. |
Styling ideas
- Entrance Focus – Flank your front path with a pair of TRESOR DU JARDIN underplanted with low lavender or catmint to echo its fragrance – ideal for homeowners wanting a welcoming, traditional approach.
- Cottage Mix – Combine with airy Aster dumosus ‘Apollo’ and Physostegia ‘Rosea’ for a soft cream-and-pink tapestry – perfect for lovers of informal cottage borders who still value structure.
- Cutting Nook – Group three plants in a small bed with easy foliages like Artemisia ‘Oriental Limelight’ to supply regular, scented stems for the house – suited to families who enjoy home-grown bouquets.
- Patio Statement – Grow a single plant in a 50 litre terracotta pot with trailing thyme at the base for all-summer scent near seating – attractive for balcony and terrace gardeners with limited space.
- Formal Accent – Set a straight row along a low hedge or path edge, evenly spaced, to create a simple, elegant hybrid tea border – appealing to those who prefer orderly, classic garden structure.
Technical cultivar profile
| Trait | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as ADAloriat, marketed as Tresor du Jardin (NIRPARFUM collection); exhibition-grade blooms suitable for garden display and cutting, ARS exhibition name Tresor du Jardin. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Michel Adam, Roses Michel Adam, France; breeding completed 2013, introduced by NIRP International in 2014, with parentage not publicly disclosed but selected for flower quality and fragrance. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated exhibition hybrid tea: multiple 2015 Baden-Baden awards including Goldene Rose, HT Gold Medal, Fragrance, Aesthetic Jury and Breeder’s Jury prizes, plus Lyon “Plus Belle Rose de France”. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact upright bush, typically 60–90 cm high with 45–65 cm spread; dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate thorns; best performance in sunny, open, well-aerated situations with fertile soil. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, solitary, very double blooms with over 40 petals, cupped form and pronounced medium-high centre; classic hybrid tea structure providing strong visual impact and ideal form for exhibition-style cutting. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Cream-pink blend: pale cream buds flushed with pastel pink, opening cream-white with pink inner petals, then fading to creamy white; repeat-flowering with abundant second flush in suitable conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strongly scented hybrid tea with a clear, fruity character; fragrance is noticeable both on the plant and in the vase, adding sensory value to borders, entrances and cut-flower arrangements indoors. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate quantities of small, ovoid orange-red hips, around 12–18 mm across, adding a discreet seasonal accent in late season where spent flowers are left to develop rather than deadheaded. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated very susceptible to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; benefits from preventative care. Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7), tolerating heat if watered regularly in dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil and regular feeding; allow space per planting distances given, and use consistent spraying and hygiene in humid areas to secure top-quality blooms and foliage. |
TRESOR DU JARDIN offers exhibition-quality, fragrant cream-pink blooms on a compact, long-lived own-root bush that settles reliably into family gardens, a thoughtful choice if you wish to invest in a refined feature rose.