Elodie Gossuin Générosa® MASelgo – pink nostalgic shrub rose
If You would like a romantic rose that copes gracefully with Irish weather, Elodie Gossuin brings full, old-fashioned blooms and a strong fruity fragrance with very little fuss. This compact shrub settles well into cottage-style beds and Dublin front gardens, rewarding basic care with generous, repeat flowering throughout our shorter summers. As an own-root plant it builds up steadily for long-term reliability, shrugging off common rose diseases and offering a reassuringly low-maintenance routine. Give it a sunny, well-drained spot where showers can dry quickly, even on heavier soils liable to hold moisture, and it will mature into a dense, upright bush that keeps its shape and colour beautifully. Over the first few seasons roots establish, shoots strengthen and then full garden character appears, turning a simple planting into a quietly luxurious highlight by the path or beside the doorway.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Cottage-style flower bed in a family back garden |
Dense, upright growth to around 70–95 cm makes it ideal for a small mixed border where You want that full, “girly” romantic look without complicated pruning; repeat flowering keeps colour going through much of the summer for the relaxed home gardener beginner |
| Dublin terraced-house front garden |
Its compact spread of 50–70 cm suits narrow beds or small gravel strips along railings, while the nostalgic rosette blooms give a soft, welcoming first impression from the street with only light deadheading needed now and then urban-owner |
| Low-maintenance specimen rose near a seating area |
The strong, distinctive fresh-fruity scent carries well on still evenings, so a single plant near a bench or patio can perfume a corner of the garden while the shrub’s tidy outline remains easy to manage for those short on time fragrance-lover |
| Own-root long-term feature in a small family garden |
Grown on its own roots, this rose slowly builds a stable framework, able to regenerate from the base if damaged, giving many seasons of consistent flowering with minimal specialist care for anyone planning their garden years ahead future-minded |
| Sunny border in wetter, wind-exposed areas |
Good overall disease resistance and tolerance of Irish showers mean foliage stays presentable with little spraying, especially when planted in soil that drains reasonably well even where heavy clays tend to hold winter wetness coastal-gardener |
| Mixed bed with perennials and soft ornamental grasses |
Olive-green, slightly glossy foliage and lush pink blooms combine beautifully with airy companions like gypsophila or sedges, creating a long-season display that remains attractive between flushes of flowers with just routine tidying design-conscious |
| Cutting patch for home bouquets |
Large, very double rosette flowers borne 3–5 per stem are excellent for romantic home arrangements, and remontant flowering means You can cut a few stems regularly without stripping the garden of colour at any one time home-florist |
| Large decorative container on a patio or balcony |
In a 40–50 litre or larger pot with good drainage, its upright habit and repeat blooms provide a long-lasting focal point; own-root vigour helps it recover well from occasional dryness or missed feeds, suiting busy city lifestyles balcony-owner |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Romance – combine with Gypsophila repens and soft blue catmint for a frothy, storybook cottage-border look – ideal for homeowners wanting a dreamy, feminine front garden
- Front-Door-Welcome – plant one either side of a path with low evergreen hedging for structure and scented summer arches of colour – suited to terraced-house entrances needing instant charm
- Pastel-Drift – mix with Sedum spurium and dwarf ornamental grasses for a low, textural planting that stays attractive well into autumn – good for busy gardeners seeking low-maintenance interest
- Cutting-Corner – group three plants with other long-stemmed perennials to create a small cut-flower bed delivering nostalgic blooms indoors all season – perfect for hobby florists
- Patio-Jewel – grow in a large clay pot with trailing thyme and soft pink pelargoniums to form a fragrant, compact focal point – great for balcony and courtyard gardeners
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Elodie Gossuin Générosa® MASelgo; shrub Romantica nostalgia rose, registered as MASelgo, bred and marketed by Roseraies Guillot, with premium gold merit rating in this product line. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Dominique Massad for Roseraies Guillot in France before 2007, introduced in 2008; parentage officially recorded as unknown, part of the Générosa® collection for garden and cutting use. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy shrub reaching approximately 70–95 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, with dense, slightly glossy olive-green foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a compact, balanced framework in the garden. |
| Flower morphology |
Large 7–10 cm, very double rosette blooms with over 40 petals, usually in corymbs of 3–5 flowers per stem; remontant habit delivers abundant second flushes given adequate light, water and feeding. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Rich, warm deep pink; buds dark with purple hints, opening to bright outer petals and softer inner tones, ARS mp, RHS 57C outer, 62B inner; colour lightens gradually to pastel pink while retaining a harmonious effect. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, distinctive fragrance with a fresh, fruity character typical of many Romantica shrubs; scent is noticeable around the plant in still conditions and adds value for cutting and seating areas alike. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set tends to be low because of the very full flowers, but when present hips are small 7–9 mm, orange-red, ellipsoidal; mainly ornamental interest, with minimal impact on overall garden performance. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated resistant to powdery mildew, black spot and rust under normal conditions; hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (USDA 6b, H7, Swedish zone 3), tolerating summer heat and moderate drought once established. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Prefers full sun in fertile, well-drained soil; space 45–90 cm depending on use, with 3.3–3.8 plants/m² for massing; deadhead spent blooms, mulch annually, and use large 40–50 litre containers if growing in pots. |
Elodie Gossuin Générosa® MASelgo offers repeat nostalgic blooms, strong fruity fragrance and long-lived own-root resilience, making it a thoughtful choice for relaxed, romantic Irish gardens.