Pear – light pink bedding shrub rose – Tanjga & Cox
Soft-pink, cup-shaped blooms and a subtle pear-like flavour make this compact shrub rose a charming choice for cottage-style borders and kitchen gardens, especially where you want reliable structure despite frequent rain and brisk coastal breezes. Its rounded form and neat height fit easily into smaller family gardens, while cluster-flowering heads add colour for much of the season with minimal deadheading. Culinary use is a delight: tender petals can garnish salads and patisserie, bringing a gentle fruit nuance rather than overpowering perfume. As an own-root plant it builds strength steadily, regenerating well after pruning or accidental damage and offering a reassuringly long garden life. Over time the shrub knits into hedges, edging and mixed plantings, supporting a relaxed, romantic look without demanding complex care from beginners or families who simply want dependable colour, light fragrance, compact habit, romantic petals, gentle flavour and adaptable planting.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Kitchen garden border near a terrace |
The edible petals with their subtle pear-like nuance are ideal for salads, cakes and decoration, so planting close to the kitchen keeps harvesting simple. Its repeat-flowering clusters ensure a steady supply through the season, making it a practical feature for home cooks and anyone who enjoys relaxed outdoor entertaining for food-loving gardeners. |
| Low, romantic hedge along a path |
The compact, upright habit and equal height–spread ratio allow this rose to form a tidy, knee-high hedge that frames paths without overpowering them. Dense, mid-green foliage reads as a soft, traditional boundary in family gardens, giving a storybook feel without complex clipping for busy homeowners. |
| Small family front garden bed |
Its modest size suits narrow beds by drives or front doors, providing pastel colour without blocking windows or sight-lines. Self-cleaning flowers reduce the need for constant deadheading, keeping the entrance presentable even when day-to-day chores take priority for time-poor families. |
| Mixed cottage-style border with perennials |
Clustered, pastel blooms combine easily with cottage favourites, acting as a gentle backdrop rather than a dominating focal point. The own-root shrub thickens year by year, so gaps fill in naturally and ornamental value remains stable over the long term for cottage-garden enthusiasts. |
| Large patio container (minimum 40–50 litres) |
In a generous container the compact root system stays manageable, and the rounded habit creates a neat mound of foliage and soft pink blooms beside seating areas. Own-root resilience helps the plant recover if watering is occasionally irregular for urban balcony and patio gardeners. |
| Edging in a family rose or herb garden |
At 55–85 cm high, it makes a balanced edging plant that visually links main borders with herbs or vegetables. The gentle scent and edible petals introduce children to sensory gardening in a safe, approachable way, encouraging seasonal rituals like picking petals together for young families. |
| Partially shaded side garden |
Its tolerance of partial shade makes it suitable where fences, sheds or neighbouring houses limit direct sun. Here the pastel colouring holds particularly well, and flowering remains reliable if the site still receives reasonable light for homeowners with awkward side plots. |
| Informal coastal-style planting with grasses |
The dense framework and moderate height help it stay visually strong among ornamental grasses, even where frequent wind and rain can flatten lighter plants, giving a romantic yet robust accent in exposed spots by the sea for coastal cottage-garden lovers. |
Styling ideas
- Kitchen‑border romance – Thread this rose through a kitchen garden with chives, thyme and low-growing heuchera, so you can pick petals and herbs together – ideal for food-focused cottage gardeners.
- Powder‑pink hedge – Plant a single row at 40 cm spacing to edge a path, weaving in catmint or dianthus at the feet for a soft, feminine ribbon of colour – suited to lovers of traditional front gardens.
- Patio teatime pot – Grow one shrub in a 50–60 litre container beside a bistro set, underplanting with trailing thyme so you can add petals and herbs straight to afternoon tea treats – perfect for terrace and balcony users.
- Cottage drift – Combine with Mexican feather grass and airy perennials for a hazy, pastel drift that sways in the breeze yet keeps a compact framework – for those seeking a relaxed, storybook border.
- Family tasting corner – Group several plants near a bench, interplanted with strawberries and mint, to create a small tasting nook where children can safely explore scents and flavours – appealing to young family gardeners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Pear – Taste of Love collection shrub rose; registered as BOZedib023, also marketed as Flavorette Pear’d in exhibitions, flowerbed shrub for garden and culinary use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Biljana Božanić Tanjga and Peter Cox for PhenoGeno Roses, introduced 2024 via Proven Winners ColorChoice, Spring Meadow Nursery and PhenoGeno; selected for flavour and garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Medium-sized shrub 55–85 cm high and wide, compact upright habit, dense mid-green slightly glossy foliage, moderately thorny stems, forming a rounded, well-filled, low-maintenance garden shrub. |
| Flower morphology |
Double, cup-shaped flowers with 26–30 petals, large cluster-flowered heads, remontant habit with an especially abundant second flush, good self-cleaning, so routine deadheading is optional rather than essential. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Light pink blooms with cream undertone, ARS LtPi, RHS 65C–65D, buds powder-pink, opening to pastel cups that hold colour moderately well, paling slightly in strong sun to a pearly, softly faded pink. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Light, restrained rose scent with a delicate, soft character; petals noted for a gentle pear-like flavour, making them suitable as a subtle accent for salads, desserts and patisserie decoration. |
| Hip characteristics |
Limited hip set due to double flowers; when present, small 6–10 mm spherical red hips add discrete seasonal interest without dominating the shrub or significantly affecting flowering performance. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Very susceptible to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, so regular preventative care is advisable; fully hardy to about −32 to −29 °C, equivalent to RHS H7, Swedish zone 5, USDA zone 4b. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, edging and large containers, with partial shade tolerance; allow 40–75 cm spacing, use well-drained soil, and apply consistent plant protection where fungal pressure is high. |
Pear – light pink bedding shrub rose – Tanjga & Cox offers compact structure, repeat pastel blooms and edible, delicately flavoured petals on a resilient own-root shrub; consider it if you want a romantic, useful rose that will mature gracefully over the years.