CHOCOLATE ROSE™ – Julia's Rose hybrid tea rose
Step outside for a brief, rain-dappled wander and let CHOCOLATE ROSE™ wrap your garden in a quietly romantic, parchment-toned glow. This classic hybrid tea opens in a rare light coffee-brown with rosy-copper shades, softening to antique parchment as the blooms mature, giving you that gentle, green, soft-light mood that flatters both Irish cottage plots and tidy Dublin terraces. Bred for reliable garden performance, it flowers repeatedly from early summer well into autumn, even where summers are short and breezy Atlantic conditions test lesser roses with persistent rainfall. Grown on its own roots, it settles in steadily and offers a long, stable lifespan, regenerating from the base if winter or pruning are ever a bit hard. With naturally good disease resistance and only modest pruning needs, you can enjoy its refined, mildly scented blooms without complicated routines, watching it move from first-year roots to second-year structure and then into full third-year beauty.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Feature rose in a small front garden bed |
The upright habit and 7–10 cm, coffee-tinted blooms create an instant talking point near a doorway without taking over the space, and the low maintenance needs suit busy townhouse schedules – ideal for the urban gardener. |
| Romantic Irish cottage border |
Planted at 60 cm intervals, the unusual parchment-beige flowers weave beautifully among perennials, bringing a nostalgic, old-letter colour note while repeat flowering carries interest from June to autumn – perfect for the cottage-garden lover. |
| Cut-flower patch for home arrangements |
Long, straight stems and classic hybrid tea form make it easy to cut for vases, while the mild, discreet fragrance adds refinement indoors without overwhelming small rooms – appealing to the home flower-arranger. |
| Low-effort family border in mixed planting |
Its good resistance to mildew, black spot and rust keeps foliage healthy with minimal spraying, so the plant stays attractive around play areas and seating without demanding constant attention – reassuring for the time-poor gardener. |
| Long-lived structure plant in a key spot |
As an own-root rose, it ages gracefully, regrowing true to type if ever cut back hard, so a single planting can anchor your design for many years with stable colour and form – valuable for the long-term planner. |
| Season-spanning accent near a patio or seating area |
Remontant flowering with a generous second flush means colour keeps returning through our shorter summers, offering a steady backdrop to evening chats and weekend coffees outdoors – rewarding for the relaxed appreciator. |
| Container planting in large decorative pots |
In a well-drained container of at least 40–50 litres, its moderate height and upright growth suit patios or balconies, provided you water regularly in dry spells and refresh the top mulch yearly – convenient for the balcony gardener. |
| Structured hedge or row along a path |
Planted at about 50 cm spacing, it forms a low, upright row with glossy dark foliage and repeated waves of caramelly blooms that soften hard lines while coping well with our changeable, rain-laden weather – ideal for the pathway designer. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Romantic – Thread Julia's Rose through a border of Mexican daisy and sweet alyssum to echo its parchment tones in a frothy, informal haze – suited to the nostalgic cottage-garden owner.
- City-Chic – Plant in a pair of large, charcoal containers flanking a front door, underplanted with dwarf lavender for fragrance and neat structure – ideal for the design-conscious urban homeowner.
- Soft-Neutral – Combine with grasses and cream perennials so the coffee-brown blooms act as subtle highlights against airy movement and light foliage – perfect for lovers of calm, minimalist planting.
- Cutting-Row – Arrange a simple, straight row at recommended spacing to give a reliable supply of long-stemmed blooms for vases all season – appealing to home florists who pick weekly.
- Warm-Glow – Place near a terrace with terracotta pots and copper accents so evening light intensifies the caramel and rosy hues of the flowers – ideal for those who enjoy twilight garden moments.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose Julia's Rose, trade name CHOCOLATE ROSE™ Hybrid tea rose Julia's Rose; ARS exhibition name Julia’s Rose; Rós taehibride collection, premium gold cultivar merit rating. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by William E. Tysterman, Wisbech Plant Co Ltd, United Kingdom, from ‘Blue Moon’ × ‘Dr. A.J. Verhage’; introduced and registered in 1976 by Wisbech Plant Co. Ltd. for garden and exhibition use. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly regarded exhibition hybrid tea with Baden‑Baden Gold Medal 1983, Montreal/CRS Best Flowering Award 1993 and Rosexpo Montreal Best Cycle of Bloom 1999 for sustained ornamental performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright hybrid tea, around 70–95 cm tall and 50–70 cm wide, with moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage tinted reddish; moderately thorny stems, poor self-cleaning so spent blooms benefit from regular deadheading. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, 7–10 cm semi-double, cupped blooms with 13–25 petals borne mostly solitary; remontant flowering with a generous second flush, providing classic hybrid tea form for both borders and cutting. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Light coffee-brown with copper and rosy hues; buds deep copper-brown, opening parchment beige-coffee with caramel-brown glow; colour lightens to parchment in strong sun; RHS 165A outer, 164D inner. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, subtly scented rose with a soft, discreet fragrance character that sits gently in the garden and in indoor arrangements, offering refinement without dominating seating areas or small, enclosed spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose hip set generally low due to semi-double flowers and regular deadheading; when present, small ovoid hips 10–14 mm across, ripening from green to red and adding a modest late-season accent. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Good resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; hardy to about −23 to −21 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 3, USDA 6a); moderate heat and drought tolerance, needing regular water in extended dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with well-drained, improved clay or loam, neutral to mildly acidic; spacing 50–90 cm depending on use; suitable for borders, beds, hedging, containers over 40–50 litres and home cutting gardens. |
CHOCOLATE ROSE™ – Julia's Rose offers rare coffee-toned blooms, reliable repeat flowering and good disease resistance on a long-lived own-root plant, making it a thoughtful choice if you would like enduring character with modest effort.