C. DE L HAŸ-LES-ROSES – pink nostalgic rose - Massad
Step out to your own soft-light garden and let C. DE L HAŸ-LES-ROSES greet you with raspberry swirls of nostalgic bloom and a rich, far-carrying fruity scent that feels like a gentle, rainy-evening stroll. This elegant shrub builds up steadily as an own-root rose, rewarding a simple planting routine with dependable structure and long-term reliability that suits the changeable Irish climate with its frequent showers and mild summers softened by ocean breezes. Over the seasons it becomes a bushy, upright feature that holds its colour well, offers repeat flowering through summer and early autumn, and settles naturally into cottage-style borders and Dublin front gardens without demanding complicated design decisions from you.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Cottage-style front garden focal shrub |
This rose’s tall, bushy habit and refined nostalgic flowers create an instant focal point by a gate, railing or low wall, ideal for terraced Dublin streets where space is tight but impact matters for every passer-by, especially for the fragrance-loving beginner gardener. |
| Romantic mixed flowerbed |
The generous, very double rosette blooms repeat well through the season, threading raspberry-pink and lavender tones among perennials and grasses so your main border keeps its romantic mood from early summer into autumn for hobby gardeners seeking long, reliable colour. |
| Statement specimen in a lawn or gravel area |
Planted alone at the recommended spacing, the upright framework and glossy dark foliage read as a small ornamental shrub, giving a structured, long-lived accent that anchors a family garden without constant replanting for homeowners planning their space for many years. |
| Own-root “heirloom feel” feature |
Grown on its own roots, this shrub can regenerate from below if winter or pruning are harsh, so ornamental value stays stable over the years and the plant ages gracefully rather than weakening on a graft, reassuring buyers who want a once-and-done, enduring choice. |
| Front garden for damp, breezy streets |
Its robust shrub framework copes well with exposed, showery coastal-urban conditions, so a simple planting hole with good drainage and mulch will see it settle into sodden winters and cool summers, suiting city gardeners dealing with blustery weather off the Atlantic. |
| Year-by-year developing family-garden shrub |
This rose is ideal if you are patient: in the first year it concentrates on roots, in the second on stronger shoots, and by the third it shows its full ornamental presence, fitting families who like watching a garden mature rather than chasing instant effects. |
| Large container on patio or doorstep |
In a 40–50 litre pot with good drainage, its upright shrub form and repeat flowering give a generous show beside a favourite chair or front door, while the strong perfume drifts around seating areas, perfect for busy urban owners who mainly garden in containers. |
| Fragrance-led seating corner |
The strong, far-scented fruity fragrance is excellent beside a bench or path you use daily, turning a short walk into a scented ritual and giving real sensory reward even on grey days for nature-oriented buyers who value aroma and atmosphere over formal perfection. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-curve – Plant in a gentle curve along a low fence with loose perennials like bee balm and Bupleurum for a relaxed Irish-cottage feel – ideal for fragrance lovers who enjoy soft, informal borders.
- Terrace-greeting – Place one shrub either side of a short front path, underplanted with low grasses, to create a welcoming scented walk to the door – suited to busy city gardeners wanting simple impact.
- Raspberry-bed – Combine with dusky purples and silvery foliage to echo its raspberry-lavender blooms for a long-flowering romantic bed – for homeowners keen on coordinated, nostalgic colour schemes.
- Patio-centre – Grow it as a single feature in a large 50 litre pot with gravel mulch, letting its strong perfume anchor an evening sitting area – perfect for small-space gardeners using hard surfaces creatively.
- Heirloom-corner – Give it a dedicated corner backed by evergreen shrubs, allowing its own-root longevity and structure to build a “passed-down” feel – for patient gardeners who like plants that grow with the family.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Shrub nostalgia rose, collection Les Provençelles; registered as MAScenthay, traded as C. de l Haÿ-les-roses, exhibition name Centenaire de l’Haÿ-les-roses for show purposes. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Dominique Massad in France from complex seedling and heritage parentage; breeding completed 2004, introduced and registered in 2014, originally distributed by Pétales de Roses. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub rose reaching about 90–150 cm high and 45–75 cm wide, with dense foliage; young leaves emerge glossy and purple, maturing to a deep, healthy dark green, moderately thorny canes. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, rosette-shaped, quartered blooms with over 40 petals, borne mainly in clusters; extra-large flowers exceeding 10 cm across, remontant with an especially abundant second flush in suitable conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Dominant raspberry-pink petals, ARS dp; RHS 63B outer, 65C inner, with peachy-lavender and silvery tones as flowers open and fade; colour retention moderate, primary pink remains visible until final petal drop. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Full-bodied, strong, far-scented fragrance with fruity rose character; perfume is noticeable at a short distance in still air and particularly effective near paths, seating and entrances where air movement is gentle. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set generally low because of very double flowers enclosing stamens; when produced, hips are small ovoid berries, around 9–15 mm, coloured orange-red and of primarily ornamental rather than wildlife value. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −21 to −18 °C, corresponding to RHS H7, Swedish zone 3 and USDA 6b; disease sensitivity moderate to powdery mildew and black spot, with high rust susceptibility, so regular monitoring is advised. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; spacing 45–90 cm depending on use; plant 3.3–3.8 per m² for massing; needs regular disease checks and timely treatments to maintain foliage and flower quality. |
C. DE L HAŸ-LES-ROSES offers rich nostalgic flowering, strong fragrance and long-lived own-root resilience for a refined Irish garden; consider it if you are planning a romantic feature that will mature gracefully over time.