MONIKA – orange hybrid tea rose TANaknom
Imagine stepping outside after light rain to find Monika glowing with soft orange and peach blooms, perfectly at ease in Ireland’s moist air and long, mild seasons with reliable rebloom after our short summers. This elegant hybrid tea gives you classic, high-centred flowers on long stems for cutting, yet stays easy to manage in a family garden, even when your soil is on the heavy side and needs thoughtful drainage. On its own roots, it settles in steadily, building a lasting framework that copes well with pruning, weather and time, so your investment matures rather than needing frequent replacement. With glossy dark-green foliage and strong disease resistance, routine care is limited to occasional deadheading and feeding, leaving you more time simply to enjoy its cheerful colour. From the first planting year’s quiet root-building to the second year’s confident new shoots and the third year’s full garden presence, you gain a dependable, long-lived feature rose that suits both romantic cottage borders and compact city front gardens seeking a touch of glow. Its tall, upright habit makes a graceful, space-efficient accent by a path, gate or low wall, bringing a feeling of gentle, everyday contentment whenever you pass.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Feature rose in a small Irish front garden |
The tall, upright structure and large, high-centred blooms give instant “proper rose” presence without taking much ground space, perfect beside a door, path or railings in town or village settings – ideal for the busy homeowner. |
| Romantic cottage-garden flower bed |
Long, repeat flowering brings waves of orange‑peach colour through the season, weaving easily among perennials and cottage favourites, so beds never look bare for long – a lovely choice for the cottage‑style gardener. |
| Cut-flower row or patch |
High‑centred, exhibition‑type blooms on good stems are made for vases; even a single bush can supply regular indoor stems with simple deadheading and feeding – perfect for the home flower arranger. |
| Low‑maintenance family border with limited time |
Strong resistance to black spot, mildew and rust means very little spraying or fuss, so borders stay attractive with minimal intervention, even in damp, mild Irish weather – reassuring for the time‑pressed gardener. |
| Mixed planting in heavier Irish soils |
Own‑root plants establish steadily, coping well as they grow into local clay soils once you give them initial structure and drainage support, so the rose settles and improves year after year – encouraging for the clay‑soil owner. |
| Part‑sunny city side return or terrace strip |
Suitable for partial shade, it will still form a tall, elegant outline and flower reliably where sun is limited to a few good hours, brightening narrow side passages or small terraces – useful for the urban gardener. |
| Large container on patio or balcony |
In a 40–50 litre or larger pot with quality compost, this upright hybrid tea becomes a vertical accent, easy to tend near the house and simple to water in dry spells, offering flowers at arm’s reach – ideal for the balcony‑patio owner. |
| Long‑term, resilient garden investment |
As an own‑root rose, it ages gracefully, regrowing strongly from the base after tough winters or hard pruning and building a durable framework that thrives in our mild, sometimes wet climate – reassuring for the long‑view gardener. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Glow – Combine Monika with purple coneflower and airy grasses for a relaxed, feminine cottage feel along a front path – for romantic, nature‑minded gardeners.
- Doorstep Welcome – Plant one specimen by a gate or porch with low evergreen edging to frame its tall orange blooms – for homeowners who want instant kerb appeal.
- Cutting Corner – Group two or three plants in a sunny strip solely for cutting, backed by Cornus sericea 'Flaviramea' for winter stems – for enthusiastic home florists.
- Clay Tolerant Border – Set Monika into improved clay with mulch, among tough perennials, for colour that returns reliably each year – for gardeners dealing with heavy ground.
- Container Focus – Grow a single plant in a 50‑litre tub with trailing herbs at the base to enjoy flowers up close on patios or balconies – for compact‑space dwellers.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as TANaknom, marketed as Monika – orange tea‑hybrid rose TANaknom; ARS exhibition name Monika; commercial group Rós taehibride. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Hans Jürgen Evers, Rosen Tantau, Uetersen, Germany from unnamed seedlings; introduced and registered in 1985, with TANaknom as the official cultivar code. |
| Awards and recognition |
New Zealand Certificate of Merit awarded in 1990 Rose Trials, confirming strong garden and show performance under independent international trial conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright hybrid tea, around 130–170 cm tall and 80–120 cm wide, with moderately dense, glossy, dark green foliage and a moderately thorny framework suited to beds or specimen use. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, 7–10 cm, double, high‑centred blooms on mainly solitary stems; 26–39 petals, classic pointed‑bud cut‑rose type; remontant with an abundant second flush in season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Fiery orange‑copper buds and blooms with golden‑yellow shading, gradually lightening to pale peach with pinkish edges; ARS PB, RHS 14B outer and 30A inner petal colour references. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak, barely scented, so it suits those preferring colour impact without strong perfume; primarily grown for visual garden effect and cut‑flower display rather than scent. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is usually low due to deadheading, though some small, ellipsoid, orange‑red hips 6–10 mm across may form if flowers are left to mature fully towards the end of the season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about –26 to –23 °C (H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4); resistant to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; tolerates heat with irrigation during extended droughts. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, specimens and cutting; spacing 65 cm for masses, 55 cm for hedges, 100 cm as specimen; 2.4–2.7 plants/m²; performs in partial shade with routine feeding and deadheading. |
MONIKA – orange tea-hybrid rose TANaknom offers long, repeat flowering, reliable disease resistance and the quiet security of an own-root plant that settles in for years; a thoughtful choice if you enjoy lasting structure with warm colour.