SHIRABE – white tea-hybrid rose – Kunieda
With SHIRABE you introduce a quietly romantic centrepiece to the garden: a hybrid tea rose whose pure white, silky blooms and strong tea fragrance immediately suggest afternoon tea beneath an arbour. Bred in Japan for harmonious balance and low-maintenance reliability, it settles well into typical British family plots, coping steadily even where gardens face brisk winds and frequent rain near the coast. Its upright habit and moderate height make it ideal beside a path, kitchen-garden fence or cottage-style border, where remontant flushes of bloom repeat through summer with little fuss. As an own-root rose it builds a durable underground framework that supports a long-lived shrub, easier to rejuvenate after harsher winters and kinder to busy gardeners who prefer enduring beauty over constant replacement or fuss. Establish SHIRABE once and enjoy years of grace, fragrance and gentle elegance around your home.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Feature rose in a small front garden |
The upright, moderately tall habit and dark green foliage give clear structure without overwhelming a small plot, while the pure white blooms read cleanly from the street and pair with any house colour; the own-root form means the plant can be kept for many years with light annual pruning, ideal for beginners. |
| Romantic focal point by a seating area |
Strong, classic tea fragrance and repeat flowering make SHIRABE perfect beside a bench, pergola or terrace where you sit for afternoon tea; its ball-shaped, very double flowers feel luxurious yet the shrub remains compact enough not to crowd furniture, suiting relaxed homeowners. |
| Mixed cottage-style border with perennials |
Snow-white flowers with a creamy heart blend effortlessly with echinacea, feverfew and bellflower, softening bolder tones while keeping the border bright; good disease resistance reduces spraying in busy family spaces, a welcome benefit for time-pressed families. |
| Cutting patch for home-arranged bouquets |
As a hybrid tea with solitary, medium-sized blooms on upright stems, SHIRABE offers reliable cutting material for jugs and vases in the kitchen; the long-lasting, strongly scented flowers hold well indoors, rewarding those who enjoy arranging but prefer low-effort hobby-gardeners. |
| Specimen rose in a lawn or gravel circle |
The harmonious, rounded outline and moderately dense foliage create a tidy, all-round view, while the white pompon blooms act as a calm focal point against grass or gravel; minimal deadheading and straightforward pruning suit practically minded urbanites. |
| Rose bed in exposed, rainy locations |
Robust resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust supports healthy foliage even where damp, breezy weather would usually mar leaves, helping the plant keep its shape and flowering rhythm with little intervention, reassuring cautious buyers. |
| Low-maintenance traditional rose border |
With moderate heat tolerance and a need only for regular watering in prolonged dry spells, SHIRABE fits traditional borders where irrigation is occasional rather than intensive; straightforward winter hardiness down to around -20 °C underpins dependable returns for many seasons for practical gardeners. |
| Large decorative container by the back door |
Planted in a generously sized 40–50 litre pot with good drainage, the upright, medium-sized shrub gives vertical interest and perfumed blooms near entrances, while own-root resilience offers better recovery if containers dry or freeze, ideal for space-limited balcony-owners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Classic – Combine SHIRABE with feverfew and clustered bellflower along a picket fence for a storybook white-and-lilac edging – for lovers of soft, romantic front gardens.
- Kitchen-Table – Grow a small row in the cutting patch near herbs so you can pick fragrant stems for kitchen jugs – for home cooks who like fresh flowers indoors.
- Moonlight – Underplant with silvery foliage and pale grasses so the white blooms glow at dusk – for evening sit-outers and terrace entertainers.
- Harmony – Mix with soft pink and blush roses to create a gentle gradient of colour around a lawn seat – for those seeking a calm, coordinated family lawn edge.
- Entranceway – Place one or two plants in large terracotta containers either side of the back door – for urban homeowners wanting a simple, fragrant welcome home.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose marketed as SHIRABE – white tea-hybrid rose – Kunieda; current trade name Shirabe Hybrid tea rose Kunieda; part of the hybrid tea rose commercial group for garden and cutting use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Kunieda Keiji at Rose Farm Keiji, Moriyama, Shiga Prefecture, Japan; parentage involves ‘Misaki (2007)’ bare-root; introduced in Japan in 2014 and selected for harmony and ornamental value. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright hybrid tea shrub, approximately 95–125 cm tall and 70–90 cm wide, with moderately dense, dark green foliage and moderate prickliness; forms a tidy, vertical outline suitable for beds, borders and specimen planting. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, ball to pompon-shaped hybrid tea blooms with more than 40 petals; medium flower size around 4–7 cm, typically carried singly on stems; remontant habit with a generous second flush over the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure white base colour with a warm creamy centre; buds show creamy tips under greenish-white sepals, opening ivory then lightening to homogeneous white, fading to opalescent powder white with the creamy tone gradually disappearing. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, classic tea-rose fragrance that is long-lasting on the shrub and when cut; scent quality suits positioning near seating or paths where passing garden users can appreciate the perfume without bending. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces small numbers of spherical orange-red hips, around 8–12 mm in diameter; hips are decorative but sparse because the very double flowers set seed less readily than simpler single or semi-double varieties. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Good overall disease resistance, noted as resistant to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; winter hardy down to approximately -21 to -18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3, USDA Zone 6b) with routine mulching in colder gardens. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions with fertile, well-drained soil; recommended spacing 55 cm for mass plantings, 50 cm for hedges, 90 cm as solitary specimens; low maintenance with regular watering in extended drought and light annual pruning. |
SHIRABE – white tea-hybrid rose – Kunieda offers fragrant repeat blooms, reliable health and a long-lived own-root shrub for easy, romantic planting; consider it if you prefer enduring charm over high-maintenance roses.