SENLITSU – pink hybrid tea rose – Kunieda
Step outside after the rain and let SENLITSU set a mood of gentle, pastel melody in your garden, its elegant hybrid-tea blooms held on neat, upright stems that suit both beds and cutting. This own-root rose is bred for durability, building a dependable framework that copes well with Ireland’s soft light and frequent showers, while also handling breezier, salt-tinged coastal conditions with reassuring ease. Plant it once and enjoy how its healthy, dark green foliage and low-maintenance nature quietly support the blooms, needing only simple seasonal care such as light deadheading to encourage more flowers. In its first season it concentrates on roots, the second on filling out with strong shoots, and by the third it settles into its full, long-lived presence as a graceful feature for cottage-style borders and Dublin front gardens.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front-garden focal point by the path or doorstep |
The upright, compact habit (around 80–110 cm) and large, pastel pink blooms make SENLITSU ideal as a welcoming feature by your gate or front door, bringing colour without blocking windows or views, perfectly suited to the busy homeowner. |
| Irish cottage-garden border with a “girly” feel |
Its very double, cupped flowers in soft pink with lilac tones create a romantic, cottage look, especially when repeated at 50 cm spacing along a mixed border, for those who like traditional charm but prefer not to fuss over pruning, ideal for the relaxed cottage-gardener. |
| Cutting patch for home flower arrangements |
Originally bred as a cut flower, it produces long, straight stems with large, elegant blooms that hold well in the vase, so a small group in a sunny corner can keep you in home-grown bouquets for months, perfect for the creative flower-lover. |
| Low-maintenance family garden rose bed |
With good resistance to black spot, mildew and rust, plus only light deadheading needed, SENLITSU suits families who want beauty without spraying regimes, giving reliable colour from early summer into autumn for the time-pressed family-gardener. |
| Feature rose in a large container on patio or terrace |
Planted in a 40–50 litre pot with good drainage, it brings refined colour and fragrance to small city spaces, thriving on regular watering and feeding while remaining tidy and upright, well suited to the space-conscious urban-gardener. |
| Rose hedge or row along a front boundary |
At 40–50 cm spacing, its dense foliage and repeat flowering create a soft, informal boundary that looks good from both pavement and house side, offering privacy and prettiness with little more than yearly shaping, ideal for the practical boundary-planner. |
| Long-term, resilient planting in exposed Irish sites |
Robust own-root growth and H7 hardiness mean the plant recovers well after harsh winters and stands up to showery, breezy weather near the coast, provided soil drains reasonably, giving confidence to the climate-aware coastal-gardener. |
| Gradually maturing “legacy” rose for a settled home garden |
This own-root plant establishes a strong framework that can regenerate from the base if ever cut back hard, rewarding patience as it shifts from root-building to full ornamental value over its first three years, appealing to the forward-looking planner. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-curve – Repeat SENLITSU along a gently curving path with campanula spilling at its feet for a soft, storybook look – ideal for romantic cottage-owners.
- Pastel-duet – Pair a small group of SENLITSU with Clematis ‘Fairy Slippers’ on a discreet obelisk for layered pink and lilac tones – perfect for colour-conscious design fans.
- Terrace-vase – Grow a single plant in a 50 litre clay pot by the back door, underplanted with trailing bellflower to soften the rim – great for busy city dwellers.
- Front-ribbon – Create a low, undulating ribbon of plants along your front border, interspersed with airy grasses for movement and texture – suited to suburban family gardens.
- Calm-corner – Place three plants in a triangle near a seating area, backed by Virginia creeper on a wall, for a calm, evening-scented nook – appealing to relaxation-seekers.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
SENLITSU – pink hybrid tea rose – Kunieda; hybrid tea rose type, Rós taehibride; collection and exhibition use as hybrid tea for cut flowers and garden bedding, marketed under Wabara lines. |
| Origin and breeding |
Second-generation bud mutation from ‘Yūzen’, bred in Japan by Keiji Kunieda, Rose Farm Keiji, Shiga Prefecture; introduced in 2018 after earlier breeding work completed around 2011. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy habit to around 80–110 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, with dense, dark green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickles on the stems, suited to beds, borders and large containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, 7–10 cm, very double, cup-shaped blooms with 40+ petals, borne mainly singly on stems; remontant habit with a generous first flush and a strong, repeat second flowering under good care. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft light pink with silvery-lilac tones; ARS code LP; RHS 65C and 76D; cooler weather deepens colour, strong sun lightens it, giving seasonally shifting pastel effects from bud through full bloom. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Pleasant, mild fragrance with a harmonious, gentle rose character; not overpowering, more of a subtle, close-up scent that suits seating areas and cut flowers indoors without dominating small spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms moderate numbers of small, spherical orange-red hips, around 10–14 mm, in autumn; hips add discrete seasonal interest but may be fewer if spent blooms are regularly cut for repeat flowering. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Good overall health with resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; winter-hardy to around −21 to −18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7), performing reliably across most temperate Irish garden conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny, well-drained soil enriched with compost; avoid waterlogging heavy clay by improving drainage and mulching; plant 40–80 cm apart depending on use; suitable for 40–50 litre containers. |
SENLITSU offers graceful, long-stemmed pastel blooms, reliable disease resistance and resilient own-root growth for years of easy enjoyment in your Irish garden, making it a thoughtful choice if you’d like a refined yet undemanding rose.