Pascaline – white dwarf-mini rose (LENpas)
With its compact habit and pure white blooms, Pascaline brings a quietly romantic touch to small gardens, patios and front paths, even where wind and rain are regular visitors. This miniature rose forms a neat, low mound of grey-green foliage, making it easy to place at the front of borders or along a cottage-style path. Its remontant flowering keeps clusters of small, cup-shaped blooms coming over a long season, and the cool white petals hold their colour well for a consistently fresh look. The medium, honeyed fragrance adds a gentle afternoon-tea atmosphere without overwhelming your seating area. Own-root cultivation means reliable regrowth and a naturally long life, so you can settle this rose once and enjoy it for years with minimal fuss as it quietly becomes part of your garden story, fitting smoothly into busy lives and modest maintenance routines. In most family gardens you will see roots establishing in the first year, stronger shoots in the second, and a rounded, fully ornamental effect by the third, supporting a sense of evolving garden character. Its compact size suits raised beds over heavier soils and makes it simple to tend without ladders or complex pruning techniques. Light seasonal trimming is usually enough to keep its upright, bushy shape, and its sparse thorns make everyday jobs more comfortable. Medium disease resistance with good black spot tolerance helps maintain a tidy look in humid seasons without constant spraying, while the H7 hardiness rating offers reassuring winter resilience for long-term enjoyment in typical UK family plots and exposed sites.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front of cottage-style mixed border |
Pascaline’s compact, upright habit and 30–40 cm height make it ideal for the front edge of mixed borders, where its cool white clusters knit easily between perennials while staying low and tidy for hobby gardeners. |
| Patio containers and large pots |
The dwarf size suits big containers (40–50 litres or more), where own-root vigour supports long life in one pot and remontant flowering brings repeated colour near seating areas without demanding complex seasonal tasks for busy urban owners. |
| Low informal hedge or path edging |
Regular planting at 25–30 cm spacing forms a charming, low edging with repeating snow-white blooms; the uniform height and medium maintenance needs make a neat line that still feels soft and romantic for traditional-style families. |
| Small family gardens with limited space |
The 30–40 cm spread and height provide a long-lived rose option where space is tight; own-root growth offers future regeneration without replanting, giving stable structure and value in modest plots for homeowners. |
| Raised beds over heavier or clay soils |
Planted into raised beds or improved pockets, this compact rose anchors well and copes with typical British wet spells and blustery conditions, offering reliable structure and flower show without elaborate soil engineering for beginners. |
| Romantic white colour-themed planting |
The pure, cool white flowers with very good colour retention anchor moonlight or white borders, pairing calmly with soft pastels and silvers while keeping a consistently clear tone throughout the season for cottage-garden lovers. |
| Cutting for small table posies |
Although miniature in flower size, the clustered stems can be cut for dainty table vases, and the medium, honeyed scent adds a gentle afternoon-tea atmosphere without overpowering indoor spaces for rose enthusiasts. |
| Low-maintenance long-term planting |
Own-root plants combine medium disease resistance, H7 hardiness and the ability to regenerate from the base, supporting a durable planting that settles in and performs over many years with light pruning and simple seasonal care for time-poor gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Path Border – Line a narrow path with Pascaline, underplanting with catmint and low lavender for a softly scented, storybook edge – ideal for cottage-garden lovers.
- Patio-Tea Corner – Grow Pascaline in a 40–50 litre terracotta pot beside a bistro set, combining with trailing thyme for a calm, afternoon-tea atmosphere – suited to balcony and patio owners.
- White-Moon Bed – Place groups of Pascaline with white foxgloves and silvery foliage plants for a cool, evening-reflective border – perfect for those who enjoy night-time garden views.
- Kitchen-Garden Fringe – Soften vegetable beds by edging them with Pascaline and herbs such as chives and oregano, blending productivity with ornament – appealing to rural kitchen-garden keepers.
- Miniature-Rose Collection – Combine Pascaline with other dwarf roses in a raised bed, using gravel paths and simple box shapes for structure – attractive for collectors of compact varieties.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Miniature, dwarf rose; registered as LENpas, marketed as Pascaline – white dwarf-mini rose – LENpas; ARS exhibition name Pascaline; exhibition miniature category. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Louis Lens, Lens Roses N.V., Belgium; parentage unknown seedling × (‘New Penny’ × ‘Jour de Fête’); introduced and registered in 1984 by Lens Roses. |
| Awards and recognition |
Honour Diploma at Rose Salon, Paris in 1984, highlighting its ornamental quality and performance in formal judging; continues to be valued by collectors of miniature roses. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact, upright mini rose reaching 30–40 cm in height and spread; dense, grey-green, matt foliage with sparse thorns; forms a neat, bushy mound suitable for edging and containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Double, cup-shaped blooms with 26–39 petals; small flowers (0.5–1.5 in) borne in clusters; remontant with an abundant second flush, providing repeated decorative value through the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure cool white flowers, ARS W, RHS 155D outer and 155C inner; colour holds well with very little fading; buds show a faint green tinge which disappears as blooms open fully. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength, honeyed fragrance that is noticeable yet not overpowering; mainly ornamental, with double blooms partly concealing stamens and therefore attracting fewer pollinators. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small, spherical hips 5–7 mm across; orange-red when ripe, adding a discreet seasonal accent; not produced heavily enough to be a key decorative feature. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Medium overall disease resistance, with good black spot resistance and moderate tolerance to mildew and rust; hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C, RHS rating H7, USDA zone 6b. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun; plant 25–50 cm apart depending on use; suitable for containers, borders and low hedging; medium maintenance with occasional pest and disease checks and light pruning. |
Pascaline offers compact, long-lived white flowering with gentle fragrance in containers or borders, and as an own-root rose it establishes reliably and regenerates well over time; a thoughtful choice for relaxed, romantic gardens.