CHRISTOPHE DECHAVANNE ® – cream-coloured hybrid tea rose - Meilland-Richardier
Under a pergola or beside a cottage path, CHRISTOPHE DECHAVANNE ® brings a quietly romantic focus of soft cream blooms with a gentle honey-peach tone, creating an immediate feeling of cosiness in family gardens. This bushy hybrid tea forms a well-filled, mid-height shrub with dense, mid-green foliage, giving a structure that looks intentional even between flushes of flowers. Bred by Meilland for repeated flowering, it produces large, high-centred, exhibition-style blooms for cutting, so you can enjoy bouquets indoors as well as elegant form outdoors. Its strong, rich fragrance brings an afternoon-tea atmosphere to patios and small lawns, while its moderate disease resistance fits neatly into a low-intervention routine in typical British conditions. As an own-root rose, it develops steadily into a long-lived garden feature: roots establish in the first year, shoots strengthen in the second, and by the third year the full ornamental impact is revealed with dependable flowering. In heavier soils it thrives when given raised beds or improved drainage, helping it stay securely anchored and healthy through wet and windy spells. Suitable for partial shade, it works well on east- or west-facing walls where the creamy flowers seem to glow in softer light. With simple seasonal pruning, it lends itself to relaxed cottage schemes where longevity and repeat bloom matter more than constant fussing.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Cottage-style flower bed by a terrace or seating area |
The strong, fruity scent and large, high-centred blooms create a romantic focal point close to where you sit, perfect for afternoon tea or evening unwinding without intensive care needs, suiting the busy hobby gardener. |
| Feature rose in a small front garden |
The bushy, mid-height habit and dense foliage give a well-kept look even in compact spaces, providing a long-lived, own-root structure that welcomes you home while staying manageable, ideal for the time-poor homeowner. |
| Cutting row in a kitchen or cutting garden |
Its XL exhibition-style flowers on sturdy stems and repeat blooming make it reliable for vases from late spring onwards, so you can pick luxurious cream roses regularly with straightforward care, perfect for the home flower arranger. |
| Mixed rose and shrub border on heavier clay soil |
Given improved drainage or a lightly raised bed, the root system establishes well and anchors the plant securely through wet, windy spells, supporting long-term performance for the practical family gardener. |
| Low informal hedge or row along a path |
Planting at hedge spacing creates a softly formal line of scented blooms that defines paths without appearing rigid, while the own-root nature helps the hedge age gracefully, appealing to the traditional cottage-garden lover. |
| Specimen rose in a large container (40–50 litres or more) |
In a generous pot, its moderate size and bushy form suit patios and balconies; with simple watering and feeding it flowers repeatedly, bringing high-impact colour where borders are limited, valuable to the urban balcony owner. |
| Partially shaded east- or west-facing border |
Tolerating partial shade, it still produces scented, creamy blooms that stand out beautifully in softer light, so awkward side passages or house walls can gain romance without demanding full sun, reassuring for the shady-garden owner. |
| Single specimen within a family lawn or play-friendly garden |
The mid-height, bushy shrub makes a clear focal point without dominating, and its own-root longevity means it can mature alongside the garden with only moderate seasonal care, fitting the long-term planning family. |
Styling ideas
- COTTAGE BORDER – Combine with lavender, catmint and soft pink perennials for a pastel English-countryside feel, ideal for those creating a relaxed family cottage garden.
- EVENING PATIO – Place in a large pot near seating, underplanted with scented herbs so creamy blooms and fragrance frame summer suppers, perfect for urban terrace and balcony owners.
- ROMANTIC ARBOUR – Plant in pairs at the front of an arbour or pergola, backed by climbers like clematis, to give structured, scented footing to a storybook entrance, suited to lovers of classic romance.
- KITCHEN GARDEN ROW – Line a vegetable or cutting patch edge, mixing with dahlias and annuals, so you can gather elegant cream stems with your produce, attractive to home florists and kitchen gardeners.
- FRONT-GARDEN WELCOME – Set as a specimen among low box or dwarf shrubs to soften driveways and front paths, giving a neat yet cosy first impression for house-proud, traditional-style homeowners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as MEIbarbaru, marketed as Christophe Dechavanne ® Perfumella® MEIbarbaru; exhibition-type blooms suitable for cutting and garden display. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in France by Michèle Meilland-Richardier (Meilland International) around 2012, introduced and registered in 2014, continuing the Perfumella® scented hybrid tea collection. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub, around 80–120 cm high with 40–65 cm spread; dense, slightly glossy mid-green foliage, moderately thorny stems, forming a balanced, medium-sized garden rose. |
| Flower morphology |
Large XL, high-centred, pointed-bud hybrid tea blooms, double with about 26–39 petals; mainly solitary flowers on stems, remontant with a generous second flush in season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft cream with peachy tones; buds pale cream with peach, opening vanilla yellow centres and creamy edges, then fading evenly to cream–ivory, giving a light cream–honey peach effect. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Rich, strong and long-lasting fragrance with fruity character; designed as a scented garden and cutting rose, providing notable perfume around seating areas and windows. |
| Hip characteristics |
Minimal hips expected due to double flowers; occasionally small spherical red hips about 8–12 mm diameter may form, generally of low ornamental significance in most gardens. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Moderate resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; hardy approximately to −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3) with routine care and monitoring. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in enriched, well-drained soil; spacing 35–55 cm depending on use; medium maintenance with occasional plant protection; suitable for partial shade and for cut-flower production. |
CHRISTOPHE DECHAVANNE ® offers strongly scented, large cream blooms on a bushy, long-lived own-root shrub that repeats reliably, making it a considerate choice for gardeners seeking enduring, romantic structure with moderate effort.