CASTA DIVA® – white hybrid tea rose – Barni
Step outside after a shower and you can imagine CASTA DIVA® catching the soft light, its blooms perfectly white against fresh green foliage. This classic hybrid tea is made for those who want elegance without giving up too much time in a busy week, settling happily into typical Irish conditions even where rainfall and moisture test other roses. Expect a refined, bushy shape that fits easily into a cottage-style border or a Dublin front garden, with long, straight stems ideal for cutting and bringing indoors. As an own-root plant, it offers discreet strength and the reassuring ability to regenerate if winter or pruning are a little harsh. Give it decent drainage on heavier soils and a bright, sunny spot, and you will be rewarded with cool, porcelain-like blooms for cutting through summer. Think of its development as a gentle arc: Year 1 establishing roots, Year 2 building shoots and structure, Year 3 delivering its full, gleaming ornamental impact in your garden.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front-of-house specimen for Irish cottage or terraced garden |
CASTA DIVA® forms a compact bushy plant with dense, light green foliage, creating a refined focal point by the front door or gate without overwhelming a small space. Its uniform growth habit makes it easy to plan around for homeowners who like clean, tidy lines, perfect for beginners. |
| Cut-flower rose for home vases |
The tall, narrow buds and long, straight, exhibition-quality stems are designed for cutting, opening slowly into large, very full blooms that hold their form well indoors. This makes it ideal for those who enjoy arranging their own home-grown bouquets, especially hobby-gardeners. |
| White accent in a mixed cottage-style border |
The pure, snow-white colour and cupped, classical flowers sit beautifully among perennials like pink verbena, dark-leaved penstemon and soft-toned echinacea, giving that romantic “girly” cottage feeling without clashing shades. A useful choice for colour-sensitive homeowners. |
| Feature rose for small formal beds |
With recommended spacings from 50–60 cm, you can create neat, repeat-flowering blocks or low hedges that frame paths or patios. Its even height and spread allow precise geometric planting, appealing to gardeners who like order and compositional clarity, including urban-owners. |
| Own-root, long-term garden investment |
As an own-root rose, CASTA DIVA® is not dependent on a graft, so if frost or a hard prune cut it back severely, it can regenerate true to type, supporting a long lifespan and stable appearance over years. This suits planners who value durability, notably long-term. |
| Sunny, sheltered rose bed in rainy districts |
Provided you choose a bright, airy position and ensure good drainage on heavier Irish soils, the plant responds with healthy, glossy foliage and reliable repeat flowering, even in exposed, damp-prone areas where other varieties can struggle with our frequent wet weather, ideal for Atlantic. |
| Container feature on patio or balcony (large pot) |
Grown in a 40–50 litre or larger container with quality compost, drainage crocks and regular watering, CASTA DIVA® becomes an elegant potted accent whose brilliant flowers read clearly from windows or seating areas, highly suitable for busy but style-conscious city-dwellers. |
| Showpiece plant for enthusiasts willing to protect against disease |
This variety rewards attentive care: while its disease tolerance is low and regular treatments are essential, dedicated growers receive premium, exhibition-style flowers in return, making it particularly attractive to detail-oriented rose lovers and competitive collectors. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-porch – Underplant CASTA DIVA® with pale pink verbena and airy grasses beside a painted front door to create a soft, storybook welcome – ideal for romantic cottage-garden fans.
- Urban-border – Line a short front boundary with evenly spaced plants and low box edging for a crisp white-and-green scheme – suits tidy-minded city gardeners.
- Moonlit – Combine with silver foliage, white penstemon and soft lavender so the blooms glow at dusk – perfect for evening patio users.
- Pastel-mix – Thread through coneflowers and blush-toned perennials to give depth and gentle contrast without losing harmony – great for colour-sensitive planners.
- Container-focus – Plant one rose in a 50 litre clay pot with trailing thyme and pale violas for a movable focal point – ideal for balcony and terrace gardeners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as SELbar 0135, marketed as CASTA DIVA® Hybrid tea rose SELbar 0135; part of the Rós taehibride commercial group, supplied as an own-root 2-litre plant. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Vittorio Barni in Italy, breeding year 1982, with parentage unknown; introduced through Rose Barni S.r.l., reflecting classic Italian hybrid tea breeding traditions and exhibition-orientated selection. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy hybrid tea with dense, glossy light green foliage, height around 80–100 cm and spread 50–70 cm; moderately thorny, weak self-cleaning so spent blooms usually need removal to maintain appearance. |
| Flower morphology |
Large 7–10 cm flowers, very full with 40+ petals, cupped form and pronounced mid-height centre; usually solitary on stems, remontant with abundant second flush, ideal for cutting and display use. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure, brilliant snow-white flowers from bud to full bloom, RHS 155C outer and 155D inner; colour holds well with minimal fading, petals ageing to chalky white without cream, pink or brown discolouration. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
No noticeable fragrance; bred primarily for visual purity and exhibition form rather than scent, making its main character that of a cool, elegant white rose suited to visual focal roles in the garden. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate quantities of small, spherical red hips, around 8–12 mm in diameter; hips can add a discreet seasonal accent later in the year if some spent flowers are left unpruned. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy approximately to −21 to −18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7, Swedish zone 3); disease resistance is very low, with strong susceptibility to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, needing regular protection. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny, well-drained sites; not suited to shade. Plant 50–60 cm apart in groups, 90 cm as specimen; high maintenance with regular spraying, dead-heading, feeding and watering during dry spells recommended. |
CASTA DIVA® Hybrid tea rose SELbar 0135 offers pure white exhibition blooms, compact structure and long-stem cutting value on a resilient own-root plant; consider it if you enjoy classic roses and can give it attentive care.