MALAGA – orange-peach hybrid tea rose – Interplant
Bring a touch of storybook romance to an everyday family garden with Malaga, a compact hybrid tea rose whose peach‑orange blooms feel made for afternoon tea under an arbour. Its upright, tidy habit and medium care needs suit busy households who still want reliable flowering and an elegant cut‑flower look in the border. Semi‑double, pollinator‑friendly flowers mature into neat orange‑red hips, extending the season well into autumn and giving long‑lasting interest. On its own roots Malaga builds a durable framework that regrows cleanly after pruning, supporting a long lifespan without complicated rose care. Thoughtful planting in lighter soils, raised beds or improved heavy clay helps it cope gracefully with cooler, breezier, rain‑splashed conditions in many UK gardens. Over time you can expect a steady rhythm of rebloom, first on strong structural stems, then a fuller display as the root system strengthens. Its medium height and compact spread sit comfortably in small cottage borders, where the warm colour palette feels instantly cosy. In larger containers of at least 40–50 litres it makes a charming focal point on a terrace, keeping the delicate fragrance close to where you sit. Within three seasons Malaga settles into a stable, easy‑to‑manage presence that quietly anchors your cottage‑style planting scheme.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small family front garden bed |
Malaga’s compact, upright habit and moderate spread make it ideal for the limited borders of an average front garden, giving tidy peach‑orange blooms that stay in scale with low hedging and paths while needing only occasional pruning for beginners. |
| Cottage-style mixed border |
The warm, shifting peach‑to‑cream tones integrate beautifully with soft pastels and cottage perennials, providing long, remontant flowering that stitches gaps between seasonal plants and keeps the border colourful through summer for romantic-gardeners. |
| Feature rose by seating or terrace |
Medium, peach‑scented blooms carried at a comfortable height invite close enjoyment beside a bench or patio table; planting in a 40–50 litre container or near a path brings the fragrance into everyday use for tea-lovers. |
| Cut-flower corner in the kitchen garden |
As a hybrid tea with solitary, long‑stemmed flowers, Malaga lends itself to regular cutting for vases, its colour harmonising with homegrown produce and herbs while the plant responds by sending repeat flushes for home-stylists. |
| Family-friendly low-maintenance rose bed |
Moderate maintenance, self‑cleaning habits and good resistance to black spot and powdery mildew reduce spraying and deadheading, suiting families wanting seasonal colour without constant attention, especially where weekend time is limited for busy-owners. |
| Pollinator-supporting ornamental border |
Semi‑double blooms with accessible stamens and good fruit set offer nectar and pollen before developing into showy orange‑red hips, adding wildlife interest and gentle structure throughout autumn and winter for nature-lovers. |
| Exposed suburban site with varied soils |
A sturdy, own‑root framework and moderate height help Malaga stay upright and presentable where breezes and frequent rain are common, particularly when planted in improved soil or raised beds over heavier clays for suburban-gardeners. |
| Long-term structural planting in a family plot |
Established on its own roots, Malaga can regenerate strongly from the base after pruning or minor damage, building up a dependable, long‑lived shrub that holds its ornamental value across many seasons for long-view-owners. |
Styling ideas
- COTTAGE RIBBON – Line a sunny path with repeating Malagas underplanted with lavender for a soft, peach‑and‑blue walkway – ideal for romantic-gardeners wanting classic cottage charm.
- TEA-TABLE FOCUS – Place a single Malaga in a 50‑litre terracotta pot by a bistro set, adding thyme and trailing ivy at the base – perfect for balcony or small‑patio tea-lovers.
- KITCHEN BUNCH – Combine Malaga with bluebeard and herbs in a cutting strip so you can gather fragrant, mixed bunches for the kitchen – suited to home-stylists who enjoy homegrown bouquets.
- AUTUMN HIPS – Plant Malaga with ornamental grasses and dogwood stems so its orange‑red hips glow against winter bark – attractive to nature-lovers who value four-season interest.
- SOFT SCREEN – Use a staggered row of Malagas with low hedging in front and perennials behind to form a gentle summer screen – good for suburban-gardeners seeking privacy without heaviness.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as INTergala, marketed as Malaga – orange-peach hybrid tea rose – Interplant; hybrid tea group, intended primarily as a cut-flower and exhibition tea hybrid type. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Interplant Roses B.V. in the Netherlands, with parentage not recorded; introduced and registered in 2000, reflecting modern hybrid tea selection for colour and repeat flowering. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, compact bush 70–95 cm high and 40–60 cm wide, moderately thorny with slightly glossy dark green foliage of medium density, forming a neat, easily managed hybrid tea shrub. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped to slightly rosette blooms with 13–25 petals, borne mainly singly; large flower size, remontant habit with an especially abundant second flush after the main summer flowering. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Peach-orange blooms (ARS OB; RHS 34A outer, 28C inner) open vivid, then fade through pastel peach-pink to a soft creamy shade, maintaining good colour retention throughout the flowering cycles. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium strength fragrance with a distinct peach character, noticeable at close range around seating areas; the semi-double flower form also supports moderate pollinator activity in suitable conditions. |
| Hip characteristics |
Abundant, ellipsoid hips 8–12 mm across, coloured orange-red (RHS 40A); valued for ornamental autumn and winter display and sometimes supplied as decorative cut fruit stems for arrangements. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3, USDA 6b); good resistance to black spot and powdery mildew, with moderate rust susceptibility, plus moderate tolerance of heat and drought. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; plant 45 cm apart in beds, 35 cm in low hedges, 75 cm as specimens; medium maintenance with some deadheading and regular watering during dry periods. |
Malaga Hybrid tea rose INTergala offers romantic peach-orange blooms, reliable repeat flowering and enduring own-root resilience; consider it when you wish to enrich a cottage-style family garden with lasting charm.