TERRACOTTA® – brick-red tea-hybrid rose - Simpson
Let TERRACOTTA® bring a mood of soft, rainy-day contentment to your Irish garden with its distinctive, brick-red blooms flushing warm against green foliage, even where rainfall is frequent and summers are short and cool. This hybrid tea’s XL flowers unfold in a rich, fired-clay colour that stands out beautifully in cottage borders and Dublin front gardens, while the upright, bushy habit stays compact enough for smaller spaces or generous containers. As an own-root plant, it promises reassuring longevity, quietly rebuilding itself from the base after winter or pruning so you can enjoy a stable display for years. Plant once, then simply keep up basic watering and light grooming for rewarding, repeat flowering from early summer onwards, supported by dense, dark foliage that frames your paths and seating areas. In its first year it settles and roots, in the second it bulks up its shoots, and by the third year it reaches its full ornamental value with confident, repeat flushes.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Feature rose in a small Irish cottage front garden |
TERRACOTTA® forms an upright, bushy shrub around 90–125 cm, ideal as a single focal point beside a path or front door without overwhelming a modest plot. Its unusual brick-red, fired-clay blooms offer strong visual interest in typical grey, overcast light, suiting homeowners who want character with minimal fuss for beginners. |
| Mixed flower bed in a family back garden |
The dense, dark green foliage and XL, double flowers give structure in a mixed border, while remontant flowering brings repeated flushes through the short Irish summer. Spacing of about 50–75 cm allows good air circulation in humid weather, helping keep maintenance at a comfortable level for busy gardeners. |
| Large container on terrace, balcony, or doorstep |
Planted in a 40–50 litre pot with free-draining compost, TERRACOTTA® works well where soil is heavy or planting space is limited. Regular watering supports its medium maintenance needs, and the upright habit makes it easy to reach for light deadheading, perfectly suiting urban owners. |
| Cutting garden for home flower arrangements |
As a hybrid tea selected for exhibition and cutting, it produces strong, solitary stems with large, double, brick-red blooms ideal for vases. Repeat flowering provides several waves of stems for the house in one season, appealing to fragrance-curious but display-focused home florists. |
| Specimen planting in lawn or gravel |
Used as a solitary specimen at 75 cm spacing, TERRACOTTA® becomes a sculptural accent, its clay-toned flowers contrasting well with green grass or pale gravel. Own-root growth supports a long-lived presence with stable form, making it attractive to value-conscious homeowners. |
| Front garden planting facing Atlantic winds |
In exposed, wetter Irish settings, dense foliage and moderate disease resistance cope respectably if basic drainage and airflow are provided, helping it handle cool, moist conditions with steady flowering in a setting often shaped by blustery ocean weather, reassuring cautious gardeners. |
| Low-maintenance family flower bed with children and pets |
The medium maintenance level mainly involves watering in dry spells and occasional disease checks, while the sparsely thorned stems are easier to manage around play spaces. Its own-root resilience supports recovery after accidental knocks, fitting safety-minded families. |
| Long-term planting in established, improved clay soil |
Once planted into well-prepared, humus-rich clay with good drainage, the own-root system develops steadily, giving a long lifespan and reliable regrowth from the base after pruning or hard winters. This gradual maturing process particularly rewards patient, quality-oriented gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Clay-Toned Cottage Border – Weave TERRACOTTA® through a loose cottage strip with low Gypsophila paniculata and airy grasses for a soft, romantic look – ideal for front-garden traditionalists.
- Terraced City Welcome – Place one rose in a tall, simple pot by the doorstep, underplanted with Bupleurum rotundifolium ‘Garibaldi’ for lime-green contrast – perfect for style-aware urban homeowners.
- Warm Brick Bed – Combine with cream perennials and pale Lychnis viscaria 'Alba' to echo brick walls and paving, creating a cohesive, warm-toned scheme – suited to small family gardens.
- Cutting-Corner Row – Plant a short row at 50 cm spacing in a side bed solely for cutting, pairing with low baby’s-breath to create ready-made bouquet partners – great for home arrangers.
- Rain-Garden Highlight – Use in a gently raised bed with improved drainage in heavier Irish soils, mulched generously, for a steady focal point in wetter climates – good for practical-minded gardeners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as SIMchoca, marketed as TERRACOTTA® – brick-red tea-hybrid rose - Simpson; ARS exhibition name Terracotta; own-root 2-litre pharmaROSA® ORIGINAL format. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Nola M. Simpson from cross ‘Princesse’ × ‘Hot Chocolate’; introduced and first distributed by Meilland Richardier (France) in 2001; registered in 2001 for garden and exhibition use. |
| Awards and recognition |
Decorated in international rose trials: Silver Star in New Zealand in 2001 and Gold Medal at Durbanville in 2006, reflecting ornamental quality and performance as a hybrid tea rose. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy shrub around 90–125 cm high and 60–85 cm wide, with dense, matte, dark green foliage and sparsely thorned stems; suitable for beds, specimens, and large containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Large XL, cup-shaped, double blooms with 26–39 petals, usually solitary on stems; remontant, producing a good second flush and further repeats in favourable seasons with appropriate care. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Warm brick-red to rust-brown tones, RHS 167A–167B, with orange-leaning highlights; colour deepens in cooler weather, lightens in heat; pre-fading tones show soft ochre-brown with rosy tints. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak and barely noticeable, making it suitable where scent sensitivity is an issue; planting is primarily for distinctive colour, flower form, and cutting rather than perfume. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose hips set only occasionally due to double flowers; when present, small ellipsoid hips about 10–14 mm, orange-red (RHS 32A i), adding modest late-season ornamental interest in some years. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Moderate resistance to powdery mildew, black spot, and rust; regular watering needed in warm spells, poor drought tolerance; hardy approximately to −21 to −18 °C (H7, USDA zone 6b, Swedish zone 3). |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Use in beds, as specimens, hedging, or large containers; prefers improved, well-drained soil, neutral to slightly acidic; spacing 40–75 cm, with regular watering, mulching, and occasional disease checks. |
TERRACOTTA® – brick-red tea-hybrid rose - Simpson offers distinctive brick-red blooms, reliable repeat flowering, and long-lived own-root resilience; a thoughtful choice if you value steady beauty with manageable care in your garden.