FRAGRANT CLOUD – coral-red hybrid tea rose – Tantau
Step outside after a shower of rain and FRAGRANT CLOUD wraps you in cheerful warmth: huge, velvety, coral-red blooms on a reliably upright bush, carrying an intense classic rose fragrance that lingers around your door or patio. Bred for resistant performance, it copes gracefully with cool Irish summers and frequent showers, even where drainage needs a bit of extra care. Low-maintenance by nature, it offers generous repeat flowering for cutting and for the garden, while own-root strength means a naturally long-lived, steady plant that regrows from the base if ever cut back hard. Plant once, water and feed modestly, then watch it move from settling roots to building shoots and, by the third season, reaching its full ornamental presence in your garden and front borders.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Feature rose near the front door |
The extremely strong, classic rose fragrance carries beautifully in still evening air, so a single bush near a doorway or path greets you every time you step outside, offering a daily moment of calm pleasure for the fragrance-loving homeowner. |
| Cutting patch in a family garden |
Extra-large, long-stemmed, cup-shaped flowers are ideal for cutting, with one rose filling a small vase and holding its scent indoors; a simple mixed cutting corner lets you harvest armfuls of blooms without complex care for the busy hobby-gardener. |
| Low-maintenance cottage-style bed |
Good disease resistance and low general maintenance needs mean less spraying and fuss; deadhead when you have time, mulch once or twice a year, and enjoy reliable repeat flowering that suits relaxed, informal planting for the time-pressed beginner. |
| Long-lived specimen in a lawn or gravel |
On its own roots, the bush matures steadily and can be rejuvenated from the base after hard pruning, giving you a long-lived focal point that keeps its character year after year, appealing to those planning a durable garden for the future-minded owner. |
| Mixed border with perennials on heavier soil |
The upright, 100–140 cm framework and dense, dark foliage carry its coral-red flowers above perennials, and with modest soil preparation for drainage it copes well with typical Irish conditions, suiting average gardens with imperfect soil for the practical gardener. |
| Partial-shade terrace or side passage |
This variety tolerates partial shade, so it will still flower and scent the air along east-facing walls or side passages where many roses struggle, bringing colour and perfume to tighter city spaces for the urban front-garden resident. |
| Large container on patio or balcony |
In a 40–50 litre or larger pot with good compost and drainage, its upright habit and repeat flushes create a strong vertical accent and fragrant backdrop to seating areas, easy to tend close to the house for the compact-space gardener. |
| Show and collector’s rose bed |
As a decorated exhibition hybrid tea and World’s Favourite Rose, its form, colour and scent reward anyone who enjoys classic blooms and careful deadheading, making it a satisfying “character” rose for the enthusiastic rose-collecting buyer. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Scent Path – Line a short garden path with spaced FRAGRANT CLOUD bushes, underplant with lady’s mantle and low campanulas to soften the edges – ideal for romantic, scent-led garden lovers.
- Terraced-Front Focus – Place a single plant in a small gravel circle by your front step, backed with evergreen box or yew, to give a strong colour statement with easy access for light pruning – perfect for busy city homeowners.
- Cutting-Corner Mix – Combine two or three bushes with chives, lavender and hardy annuals in a sunny square, giving ready-made arrangements for the house – great for families who enjoy homegrown bouquets.
- Evening-Seating Glow – Position a pair in large matching containers by a bench or patio table where evening light picks up the coral-red petals, encouraging relaxed outdoor meals – suited to small, sociable gardens.
- Classic-Specimen Lawn – Plant one rose in the centre of a circular bed in the lawn, edged with low catmint, for an easy-to-mow, traditional focal point – appealing to those who like ordered yet low-effort design.
Technical cultivar profile
| Aspect | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as TANellis and marketed as FRAGRANT CLOUD; commercial type hybrid tea, ARS exhibition name Fragrant Cloud, belonging to the Rós taehibride group. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Mathias Tantau Jr. at Rosen Tantau KG, Germany, from ‘Prima Ballerina’ × ‘Montezuma’; introduced and registered in 1963, distributed initially by Rosen Tantau. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly honoured cultivar: Portland Gold Medal 1966, James Gamble Fragrance Award 1970, and elected World’s Favourite Rose, WFRS Hall of Fame, in 1981. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright hybrid tea, typically 100–140 cm tall and 75–105 cm wide, densely thorned with dark, glossy foliage; spent blooms persist and usually require manual removal to keep plants tidy. |
| Flower morphology |
Very large, 10 cm+ solitary blooms, double with 26–39 petals, cup-shaped of medium height; remontant with generous repeat flushes through the season, mainly borne singly on strong stems. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vivid coral-red with a warm orange hint; buds dark coral with bronze sheen, opening deep velvety red that can fade paler in strong heat, sometimes taking on a smoky purplish tone as flowers age. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Extremely strong, long-lasting scent with a classic rose character; fragrance is notable both in the garden and in cut stems indoors, one of the defining features of this cultivar. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally low due to double flowers and regular deadheading, but occasional ellipsoid orange-red hips, around 12–18 mm across, may develop late in the season if blooms are left. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Good resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; cold-hardy to about −26 to −23 °C (H7, USDA 5b), tolerating heat and some drought but performing best with regular watering. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, specimen use and cutting; plant 55–100 cm apart depending on effect, preferably in well-drained soil with sun or light shade, and deadhead to maintain flowering and appearance. |
FRAGRANT CLOUD offers intensely fragrant, exhibition-quality coral-red blooms on a long-lived, own-root shrub that rewards light care with years of reliable flowering; consider it if you would like a character rose with enduring charm.