BELLE DE SEGOSA – fuchsia park rose – Massad
Let Belle de Segosa bring a touch of storybook romance to your garden: an upright, bushy shrub rose with fuchsia and white bicoloured blooms, ideal for low-maintenance borders in small family plots where coastal breezes and rain are part of everyday life. Its strongly fragrant, very double, cup-shaped flowers appear in generous flushes, creating an inviting, afternoon-tea arbour feel along paths, fences or at the back of a cottage-style bed. As an own-root rose it is naturally long-lived and resilient, regrowing reliably from its base after harder pruning and keeping its ornamental value over many years with only simple, seasonal care. In its first seasons it concentrates on roots, then builds sturdy shoots, and by the third year it settles into its full, romantic character as a dependable, medium-maintenance feature for relaxed country-style gardens.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Romantic cottage-style flower bed in a family garden |
Belle de Segosa’s upright, bushy habit and dense foliage give a soft, traditional outline that suits mixed cottage borders with perennials and herbs, while its remontant flowering maintains colour without complex care – a reassuring choice for beginners. |
| Fragrant seating area or afternoon-tea corner |
The strong, fruity fragrance and very double, cup-shaped blooms create an intimate, storybook atmosphere near benches or small patios, offering sensory impact from a modest footprint – ideal for those who savour time outdoors as homeowners. |
| Informal low hedge or boundary accent |
The medium-tall height and bushy structure lend themselves to loose hedging at 40–50 cm spacing, forming a gently enclosing, romantic edge that remains attractive through the season with minimal shaping – well suited to practical, style-conscious families. |
| Specimen rose in a smaller lawn or front garden |
Used singly at about 90 cm clearance, its bicoloured fuchsia-and-white flowers read clearly from the pavement, bringing character without dominating the space, and the own-root form supports long service life with straightforward pruning for busy gardeners. |
| Raised bed on heavier or poorly drained soils |
The sturdy root system of an own-root shrub rose responds well in raised beds, where improved drainage supports consistent performance even where natural soil is heavy, helping UK gardeners with challenging plots feel more confident as hobbyists. |
| Large container on terrace or paved courtyard (40–50 L) |
In a 40–50 litre pot with regular watering, its upright form, moderate spread and repeat flowering make a long-lived container feature; own-root resilience allows renewal from the base if top growth is cut back – attractive to space-limited urban gardeners. |
| Mixed planting with lavender, grasses and kitchen herbs |
The fuchsia blooms pair beautifully with dwarf lavender, chives and low grasses, giving a relaxed kitchen-garden look; moderate disease resistance is easier to manage in such airy plantings where coastal breezes and frequent rain are part of routine for cottagers. |
| Wildlife-friendly family border with seasonal hips |
Moderately produced, bright red hips add late-season interest and gentle wildlife value once flowering slows, extending the ornamental period and teaching children the garden’s yearly rhythm in a subtle way appreciated by nature-aware parents. |
Styling ideas
- Tea-terrace focus – Plant one or three Belle de Segosa near a bistro set, underplanted with dwarf lavender for scent layers – ideal for fragrance lovers who enjoy lingering over afternoon tea.
- Cottage hedge – Create a low, informal hedge along a path at 40–50 cm spacing, weaving in chives at the feet – perfect for families wanting a soft, traditional boundary without rigid clipping.
- Kitchen-garden charm – Mix with herbs and glaucous sedge in a raised bed to echo a rustic potager – suited to hobby cooks who like cutting a few scented stems for the table.
- Front-garden welcome – Use as a single specimen framed by pale perennials to make the bicolour flowers stand out – a good option for homeowners who want kerb appeal with simple upkeep.
- Paved-corner oasis – Grow in a 40–50 litre container by a sunny wall, combining with trailing plants around the rim – attractive for urban gardeners making the most of limited patio space.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Shrub rose from the Les Provençelles collection; registered as MASsego, traded as Belle de Segosa, a park-shrub type suitable for garden use and informal landscaping. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in France by Dominique Massad from ‘Valchlea’ × ‘Michelle Bedrossian’; introduced and registered in 2013, first distributed by Pétales de Roses in the French market. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Medium-tall, upright, bushy shrub reaching about 110–180 cm high and 50–80 cm wide, with dense, matt mid-green foliage and moderate prickles, forming a full, vertical accent. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, large cup-shaped blooms with more than 40 petals, usually borne singly on stems; remontant habit with a generous second flush after the main early-summer flowering. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vivid fuchsia upper petals with white undersides, ARS MB; RHS 67A outer, 155C inner; colour softens from deep fuchsia to mauve-pink as flowers age, while the underside remains pale. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, distinctive scent with a rich, fruity character, noticeable in warm, still weather; very double form offers decorative impact while remaining moderately attractive to visiting pollinators. |
| Hip characteristics |
Develops bright red, spherical hips about 9–16 mm in diameter in moderate quantities, providing an additional decorative element and gentle wildlife interest in late season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Winter hardy to around –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3, USDA 6b); moderate resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, requiring occasional protective care in humid seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions with fertile, well-drained soil; space 50 cm for beds, 40 cm for hedges, 90 cm as specimens; suit 4 plants/m² in square or 4.6 plants/m² in hexagonal planting schemes. |
BELLE DE SEGOSA offers richly fragrant, romantic bicolour flowers on a long-lived shrub, combining dependable garden structure with own-root resilience; consider it if you seek an easy-care, characterful rose to anchor a cottage-style space.