BRIEF ENCOUNTER – salmon-pink tea-hybrid rose – Meihylvol
If you enjoy stepping outside for a quiet moment among raindrops, BRIEF ENCOUNTER surrounds you with gently glowing salmon-pink blooms that feel both romantic and reassuringly reliable. This award-winning hybrid tea creates tall, elegant stems with XL, very full flowers, perfect for cutting and for giving a soft cottage-garden ambience to a small Irish front garden. On its own roots it settles in steadily, building strength for a long, healthy lifespan with dependable flowering year after year. It copes well with our damp, mild conditions and the extra fungal pressure of an Irish summer, needing only occasional care to stay looking refined. Think of it as a three-stage companion: roots establishing in the first year, shoots building up in the second, and full ornamental impact from the third – bringing a sense of gentle, everyday contentment whenever you pass by.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point beside the path |
The tall, upright habit and XL, very full blooms draw the eye from the pavement, giving a cottage-style welcome without needing complicated pruning skills. On its own roots it matures into a long-lived, reliable feature that suits busy urban passers-by who want impact with modest effort for the beginner. |
| Cutting patch for scented house bouquets |
As a hybrid tea bred for exhibition and cutting, BRIEF ENCOUNTER produces long, straight stems with solitary, showy flowers that hold well in the vase. Strong, long-lasting scent means just a few stems can perfume a room, rewarding regular picking and simple deadheading for the homeowner. |
| Mixed flower bed in a family back garden |
Plant at 60 cm spacings to create a glowing salmon-pink ribbon through perennials and grasses. Moderate maintenance needs and own-root resilience make it a good choice where children play and life is busy, offering years of dependable structure and colour for the family. |
| Low rose hedge along a driveway or front boundary |
At around 1 m high with dense, glossy foliage, it forms a stylish, flower-rich boundary when planted about 50 cm apart. Rewarding but not fussy, it offers a formal yet friendly edge in Irish rain and wind conditions for the gardener. |
| Feature rose in a large container |
In a 40–50 litre pot with good drainage, this upright hybrid tea becomes a vertical accent on a patio or doorstep. Own-root vigour supports long-term replanting if needed, while the salmon-pink flowers pair beautifully with seasonal underplanting for the balcony-owner. |
| Irish cottage garden border with perennials |
The warm salmon-pink tones blend easily with soft blues and airy pinks, echoing traditional cottage schemes. Its remontant flowering keeps colour coming through a short Irish summer, building a stable, repeat-flowering framework around which other plants can weave for the romantic. |
| Stylish showcase for rose enthusiasts and exhibitors |
With multiple European awards and exhibition credentials, this variety offers consistent, show-quality blooms in garden conditions. When planted in well-prepared soil with good drainage and regular feeding, it responds with refined form and colour that satisfy the serious collector. |
| Rosa bed on heavy clay improved for drainage |
On heavy Irish clay, loosen soil deeply, add grit and organic matter, and mulch well to keep roots aerated yet moist in our humid weather with strong fungal pressure. The own-root system helps long-term recovery and stability, even if top growth ever needs harder pruning, supporting the patient beginner-gardener. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-curve – Sweep a curved front-garden bed with BRIEF ENCOUNTER underplanted with pink Gypsophila ‘Festival Pink Lady’ for a frothy, romantic edge – ideal for terrace-house owners who like soft, storybook charm.
- Elegant-trio – Plant three roses in a triangle in lawn or gravel, letting their tall, scented stems stand alone as a sculptural group – suited to those who want a simple yet refined focal point with minimal complexity.
- Grass-partner – Combine with Calamagrostis x acutiflora ‘Karl Foerster’ for a modern cottage mix: vertical grasses and repeating salmon blooms moving together in the wind – perfect for contemporary Irish gardens seeking easy structure.
- Blue-contrast – Pair BRIEF ENCOUNTER with Echinops (blue globe thistle) so warm salmon flowers glow against cool blue spheres, giving a pollinator-friendly blue layer and a classic cut-flower look – great for creative bouquet makers.
- Doorstep-drama – Grow one plant in a 50 litre pot by the front door, with low seasonal bedding at the base, to welcome visitors with scent and colour – for busy homeowners who want instant elegance with straightforward care.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as Meihylvol; traded as BRIEF ENCOUNTER PERFUMELLA®, also exhibited as Arthur Rimbaud®. Collection PERFUMELLA®, premium gold cultivar merit rating. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Jacques Mouchotte for Meilland International in France, from unknown parentage. Raised 2005, registered 2008, introduced 2009 in France via Corporate Roses and other distributors. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated: multiple international prizes including Geneva Plus belle rose des Dames, Lyon Silver Medal, several Hradec Králové awards, and Nantes Prix d’Honneur between 1998 and 2010. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy hybrid tea reaching about 95–125 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, with dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickliness; forms a refined, vertical garden presence. |
| Flower morphology |
Very full, cup-shaped hybrid tea flowers over 10 cm across, usually solitary on stems. Strongly remontant, with a generous second flush and further waves given good feeding and deadheading. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Warm salmon-pink with orange undertones; buds deep orange-salmon, then rich salmon-pink before softening to pastel peach. RHS 36C outer and 36D inner tones, with gradual, attractive fading on the shrub. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Noted for strong, long-lasting scent of classic hybrid tea character, appreciated in international trials. Ideal for cutting so its fragrance can be enjoyed both in the garden and indoors. |
| Hip characteristics |
Due to very double flowers, hip set is generally low; occasional small, egg-shaped orange-red hips, around 11–15 mm across, may develop late in the season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about -21 to -18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7, Swedish zone 3). Disease resistance moderate to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; benefits from good air flow and occasional protective treatments. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Prefers sunny positions, fertile, well-drained soil with improved clay where needed. Space 50–100 cm depending on use, water in dry spells, and feed annually to support remontant flowering and long-term own-root vigour. |
BRIEF ENCOUNTER PERFUMELLA® Meihylvol offers award-winning salmon-pink blooms, strong fragrance and long-lived own-root resilience; an excellent choice if you would like a graceful, enduring rose for your garden.