SENLITSU – pink hybrid tea rose – Kunieda
elegant blooms, reliable remontant flowering and a upright habit make SENLITSU an easy rose to place in a modest British family garden, giving you refined, pastel colour without demanding advanced pruning or specialist care. Its disease-resistant foliage keeps the plant neat in mixed borders even in damper seasons, while own-root stamina supports a settled, long-lived shrub that copes well with typical garden soils and the need for drainage in heavier clays or wetter spots. In its first years it knits in steadily – roots in the first season, stronger shoots in the second, then full ornamental impact by about the third – offering dependable flowering structure for front gardens, paths and cottage-style combinations that remain quietly charming with limited attention.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point near the entrance |
The upright habit and refined, pale pink blooms create a composed welcome by a gate or front door, staying tidy with basic deadheading and light annual pruning, ideal for design-conscious but time-poor homeowners |
| Small mixed border with perennials |
Good disease resistance and moderate height let it sit comfortably among campanulas and low grasses, adding repeat pastel colour without dominating, suiting cottage-style borders maintained by relaxed, once-a-season gardeners |
| Compact rose bed of 3–5 plants |
Planted at recommended spacing, the even, upright bushes form a simple, coherent bed that flowers in waves through summer with only routine watering and feeding, appealing to those wanting structure without complex planning |
| Feature rose in a large container (40–60 litres) |
In a generous pot with regular watering, its tidy growth and long-lasting blooms give terrace or patio interest, while own-root vigour supports recovery from minor neglect, suiting busy urban balcony and courtyard owners |
| Pathside or driveway edging |
Dense, dark foliage and repeat-flowering pastel heads line paths neatly; simple annual shaping keeps plants within bounds, making it practical for those who want formality without frequent trimming householders |
| Family back garden seating area |
The mildly scented, very double flowers offer gentle colour and a subtle perfume near seating, without strong fragrance or thorns that dominate the space, a calm choice for families seeking relaxing, low-intervention spaces |
| Clay or heavier soil beds with improved top layer |
Once planted into a well-prepared, free-draining topsoil, its own-root resilience and good disease resistance provide a stable, low-fuss shrub that copes with typical British heavier soils and their need for better managed drainage for casual gardeners |
| Seasonal cutting corner for home arrangements |
Hybrid tea, long-stemmed flowers in soft pastels lend themselves to small vases; repeat flushes mean regular stems with simple feeding and deadheading, attractive for beginners who enjoy occasional home-grown bouquets |
Styling ideas
- Pastel Welcome – Combine SENLITSU with white campanulas and soft grey foliage for a gentle entrance bed – suited to homeowners wanting a calm, elegant front garden.
- Cottage Mix – Thread among clematis and airy perennials for layered height and repeat blooms – ideal for those who like informal, traditional cottage borders.
- Patio Focus – Plant singly in a 50–60 litre terracotta pot with low lavender edging – perfect for balcony or terrace users seeking a single, reliable feature rose.
- Soft Hedge – Line a short path with evenly spaced plants to create a low, flowering hedge – good for families who want structure without rigid, hard-pruned shrubs.
- Cutting Nook – Group three plants in a sunny corner to supply pastel stems for vases – appealing to beginners who enjoy simple, home-grown floral arrangements.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose; current trade name SENLITSU – pink hybrid tea rose – Kunieda; collection hybrid tea rose; name meaning “melody” in Japanese; commercial group hybrid tea. |
| Origin and breeding |
Second-generation bud mutation from ‘Yūzen’, bred 2011 by Keiji Kunieda, Rose Farm Keiji, Shiga Prefecture, Japan; introduced by Wabara in 2018; registration date not available. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright bush reaching about 80–110 cm high and 50–70 cm wide; dense, dark green, slightly glossy foliage; moderately thorny shoots; weak self-cleaning so spent blooms benefit from deadheading. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, solitary, very double, cup-shaped blooms with 40+ petals; hybrid tea form on good stems; remontant with abundant second flush; suitable for cutting as well as garden display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Delicate light pink with faint lavender tones; buds soft pink with silvery-lilac veil; pastel cupped flowers deepen in cool weather and lighten in heat; moderate colour retention in strong sun. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, pleasant fragrance with a harmonious, unobtrusive character; enough scent for close enjoyment near seating, but not dominant indoors; primarily grown for visual rather than aromatic impact. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate numbers of small, spherical hips, around 10–14 mm, colouring orange-red in autumn; offers additional seasonal interest if spent flowers are not removed late in the season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Good overall disease resistance, with noted tolerance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; hardy approximately to −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); tolerates heat with watering. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions with fertile, well-drained soil; allow 40–80 cm spacing depending on use; low maintenance with light annual pruning, feeding, and watering during prolonged dry periods. |
SENLITSU offers elegant pastel blooms, dependable repeat flowering and good disease resistance on a long-lived own-root shrub, making it a reassuring choice if you want a quietly refined rose you can plant and simply enjoy over time.