AQUALINA – pink nostalgia rose – pharmaROSA®
Step out your front door into a soft Irish drizzle and find cheerful colour waiting: AQUALINA brings warm, peach-pink rosettes that feel like a gentle cottage moment every time you pass. This nostalgia-style shrub–Hybrid Tea rose forms an upright, moderately dense bush with glossy dark foliage and barely any thorns, making it easy to enjoy in a tight terraced-front setting or along a busy path. It repeats well, giving generous flushes from early summer onwards even when our summers are short and the air is damp with rainfall, so you are not relying on one brief show. As an own-root plant it settles in steadily, building a long-lived framework that shrugs off normal pruning mistakes and lets you garden more lightly. Once planted with decent drainage for heavier Irish clay, it grows into a reliable feature: think year one for strong roots, year two for confident new shoots, and by year three a full, stable display you can simply deadhead and enjoy. Ideal as a romantic specimen or in small hedges, AQUALINA suits gardeners who want graceful flowers without constant fussing.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden specimen beside the path |
AQUALINA’s XL, very double, rosette blooms and upright habit create an instant focal point in a small front garden without overwhelming the space. The warm peach-pink tones read beautifully from the pavement, even on grey days. Barely thorny stems make it practical where people brush past, especially for households with children and pets or anyone wanting a welcoming look for beginners. |
| Romantic cottage-style flowerbed |
The nostalgia bloom form and soft, fading pink palette fit a relaxed Irish cottage border with perennials and grasses. Its repeat flowering means you get several waves of colour through a short summer, echoing old-fashioned roses but with modern reliability. Best in a sunny spot with reasonably drained soil, it rewards light deadheading and seasonal feeding for hobby-gardeners. |
| Low, informal hedge along a drive or boundary |
With a spread of 60–90 cm and recommended hedge spacing of about 40 cm, AQUALINA knits into a low romantic boundary that softens walls or wire fencing. The glossy dark foliage stays attractive between flushes, while moderate disease resistance, including good black-spot resistance, supports a chemical-sparing approach for nature-lovers. |
| Cut-flower corner for the family garden |
As an exhibition-type Hybrid Tea with solitary, extra-large blooms, AQUALINA lends itself to cutting for vases and special occasions. The many-petalled rosettes hold their shape well and the colour transition—from vibrant peach-pink to powdery cream—adds depth indoors. Plant 2–3 bushes in a sunny, accessible bed for easy snipping by homeowners. |
| Mixed border with grasses and perennials |
Pairing AQUALINA with companions like Carex morrowii or softly scrambling clematis lets the rose’s romantic flowers stand out against movement and texture. The dark, glossy foliage gives a solid backdrop through the season, while moderate height (85–120 cm) suits layered planting. Maintenance remains simple for busy-urbanites. |
| Smaller family gardens with heavier clay soil |
AQUALINA copes well in typical Irish conditions when planted into improved, free-draining holes and mulched yearly to protect roots and structure. Its own-root constitution builds a long-lived, resilient plant that rebounds after pruning mishaps, fitting a garden where you want dependable colour despite frequent soft rain and short summers for time-poor-gardeners. |
| Large patio container near the seating area |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container with good drainage, AQUALINA forms a tidy, upright shrub that frames doors, patios or balconies. Regular watering and feeding keep the repeat flowering coming, while the barely thorny stems and weak fragrance make it easy to place close to chairs without snagging or overpowering scent for city-dwellers. |
| Low-intervention, long-term planting plan |
Chosen as a premium-merit, own-root rose, AQUALINA offers stable growth, the ability to regenerate from the base after hard pruning or winter damage, and a consistent look over many years. Once established, you mainly need annual pruning, a mulch top-up and some deadheading, making it ideal if you prefer a relaxed, sustainable routine for low-maintenance-seekers. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-border – Underplant AQUALINA with foxgloves, hardy geraniums and Carex morrowii for a soft, storybook edge to a path – ideal for romantic cottage-garden fans.
- Front-hedge – Plant a loose row at 40 cm spacing along a low wall, mixing in white campanulas to echo the fading cream tones – perfect for neat but welcoming front gardens.
- Patio-feature – Grow a single plant in a 50 litre terracotta pot with trailing thyme at the base to scent the paving – suited to small urban patios and balconies.
- Cutting-patch – Group three bushes in a sunny corner with easy-access paths, adding simple fillers like Alchemilla mollis for vase companions – for families who enjoy bringing flowers indoors.
- Textured-mix – Combine AQUALINA with airy grasses and Clematis montana ‘Elizabeth’ on a nearby trellis to create a layered romantic scene – great for design-conscious, low-fuss gardeners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
AQUALINA – pink nostalgia rose, Romantic rose collection; shrub–Hybrid Tea garden rose used also for exhibition cut flowers; trade name Aqualina Romantic rose pharmaROSA®, own-root container-grown form. |
| Origin and breeding |
Discovered in Germany in 2005, with parentage and breeder data not fully recorded; introduced by PharmaRosa® Ltd. for Central European and Atlantic-climate gardens, focusing on nostalgic flower form. |
| Awards and recognition |
Show-category distinction from the Syracuse Rose Society at the Flowers Expo, Moscow, confirming exhibition-worthy flower size, form and presentation on strong, upright stems. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright shrub to 85–120 cm high and 60–90 cm wide, moderately dense, with glossy dark green foliage and very few thorns; own-root growth provides stable structure and recovery from hard pruning. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, rosette-shaped blooms with 40+ petals, usually solitary on stems; extra-large flowers over 10 cm, repeating well through the season with abundant second flush when deadheaded. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Warm peach-pink inner petals and porcelain light pink outer ring; ARS mp, RHS 65C–65D; colour fades to powdery cream toward petal drop, giving a nostalgic, softly changing display over time. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak, detectable only at close range, making it suitable near doors, windows or seating for those preferring visual impact and low-scent planting in compact outdoor spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small ellipsoidal red hips, about 8–13 mm diameter, form after flowering when deadheading is relaxed, adding subtle seasonal interest without dominating the plant’s ornamental effect. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C (H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); moderate resistance overall with good black-spot resistance, but occasional powdery mildew or rust in humid summers may need attention. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Plant in full sun with improved drainage, especially on heavy clay; spacing 40–75 cm depending on use; mulch annually, water in dry spells, and deadhead to support repeat flowering and tidy appearance. |
AQUALINA offers large nostalgic blooms, an upright, low-thorn habit and long-term own-root reliability, making it a thoughtful choice if you would like a romantic yet undemanding rose for your garden.