GRAND MOGUL – cream-white tea-hybrid rose – Delbard-Chabert
With its refined, exhibition-style blooms and soft ivory tones, GRAND MOGUL brings an air of quiet luxury to a family garden, whether you grow it in a border or by a sunny terrace. Bred by Delbard for the classic hybrid-tea silhouette, it offers medium-height, upright structure that is simple to place: a single specimen beside a bench, a small group near the kitchen path, or a row to frame a cottage-style arbour. The well-scented, high-centred flowers are perfect for cutting, so you can enjoy their fragrance indoors as well as outside during afternoon tea. On its own roots this rose is bred for longevity, quietly rebuilding from the base after harsh winters and keeping a stable shape over the years with only moderate maintenance. Reliable repeat flowering from early summer into autumn means you can expect a calm, creamy-white presence even in exposed gardens where strong winds and frequent showers can rattle less resilient varieties, provided the planting spot has reasonable drainage and shelter from standing water. Planted as a sturdy, container-grown two-litre rose, it will first focus on roots, then on bushy new shoots, before finally settling into its full ornamental presence over several seasons of gentle care.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Feature rose near a seating area |
The upright, medium-sized habit makes it easy to place beside a bench, patio or garden table without overwhelming smaller family spaces, while the classic, high-centred buds and creamy tones give a calm, elegant focus ideal for relaxed afternoon tea lovers, especially beginners. |
| Cutting patch in a kitchen or cottage garden |
High-centred, exhibition-quality blooms on long, straight stems provide reliable material for vases and posies, with a classic rose scent that suits country-style interiors; regular cutting also helps tidy spent flowers for those seeking simple beauty with minimal fuss, particularly homeowners. |
| Small mixed border with perennials |
Its moderate height and upright habit weave well among cottage favourites such as lady’s mantle and low heucheras, creating soft colour transitions while leaving space for herbs and seasonal vegetables in an informal, workable layout valued by hobby-gardeners. |
| Sunny front garden for kerb appeal |
Repeat flushes of cream-white flowers keep the frontage presentable over a long season, while own-root resilience ensures the bush remains well-shaped and recoverable after harsh winters, suiting households who prefer enduring structure with few tasks, especially families. |
| Informal hedge or row along a path |
Planted at the recommended spacing, its regular, upright framework and consistent flowering create a gentle boundary that guides movement without feeling formal; light deadheading is usually enough to maintain tidy lines for those with limited gardening time, notably busy-urbanites. |
| Container rose on terrace or balcony |
In a large 40–50 litre container with good drainage, it offers a vertical accent of scented blooms close to the house, while the own-root system builds steadily for many years, making it a practical long-term choice for space-conscious city-dwellers. |
| Family garden focal point in heavy soil |
Planted into a slightly raised, improved bed over heavier clay, its robust root system gradually anchors the plant and supports steady top growth, giving dependable flowering despite changeable weather, which particularly reassures cautious but style-conscious buyers. |
| Long-lived specimen in a traditional rose bed |
As an own-root hybrid tea, it ages gracefully, renewing shoots from the base and maintaining its structural integrity with flexible pruning options over many years, aligning with gardeners who value enduring, low-complexity planting rather than frequent replacements, especially planners. |
Styling ideas
- Cream-hedge – Line a path with evenly spaced plants, underplant with Alchemilla mollis for frothy lime contrast and a soft cottage edge – ideal for traditional front-garden owners.
- Tea-corner – Place one or three bushes near a bistro set, with terracotta pots of herbs to echo the warm cream tones and fragrance – perfect for afternoon-tea enthusiasts.
- Ivory-border – Combine GRAND MOGUL with dwarf coral bells and creeping gypsophila for a gentle ivory-and-blush tapestry – suited to lovers of romantic, muted palettes.
- Kitchen-cutting – Tuck a short row beside the kitchen garden, mingling with herbs so you can pick both flowers and foliage for jugs indoors – great for practical, creative gardeners.
- Pot-parlour – Grow one plant in a 50 litre clay pot by the back door, surrounding the base with trailing thyme for scent and softness – appealing to balcony and terrace gardeners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose marketed as GRAND MOGUL, an exhibition-style cream-white cultivar used both in gardens and as a cut flower; current trade name: Grand Mogul Hybrid tea rose Delbard-Chabert. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by André Delbard-Chabert in France from parents ‘Sultane’ × ‘Chic Parisien’; introduced and distributed by Delbard / Georges Delbard SA in 1965 as a refined hybrid tea rose. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Medium-height, upright bush reaching about 100–140 cm in height and 65–95 cm spread, with moderately dense, mid-green glossy foliage and a moderately thorny framework suited to structured planting. |
| Flower morphology |
High-centred, pointed-budded double flowers with 26–39 petals; medium-sized solitary blooms on stems, remontant with a generous second flush, offering classic hybrid tea form for cutting and display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft ivory to cream-white flowers with delicate buttery-yellow shades towards the centre, opening from lightly tinted buds and gradually fading to near-white with a slight greenish cast at the outer petal edges. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength classic rose fragrance, clearly noticeable on warm, still days; primarily ornamental rather than for culinary or cosmetic use, yet well-suited to scented garden corners and cut-flower arrangements. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose-hip production is generally low due to the fully double flowers, though occasional small, spherical orange-red hips 8–12 mm across may develop late in the season on un-deadheaded stems. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, roughly USDA 6b), with good resistance to powdery mildew and black spot and moderate rust tolerance, responding well to routine watering during extended summer droughts. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in a sunny, well-drained spot; plant 55 cm apart in beds or 50 cm in hedges, allowing 90 cm for specimens, with moderate care such as deadheading and occasional pest and disease checks as needed. |
GRAND MOGUL offers refined cream-white blooms, reliable repeat flowering and enduring own-root strength for years of scented garden moments; consider it if you wish to add a quietly elegant focal rose.