CASANOVA – pale yellow hybrid tea rose – McGredy
With its softly glowing, pale lemon blooms, CASANOVA brings a sense of balance and quiet elegance to compact family gardens, especially in rainwater‑fed, clay‑based beds where drainage has been gently improved. Bred by McGredy, this classic hybrid tea offers reliable reblooming flushes from early summer to autumn, giving you a steady supply of high‑centred flowers for cutting and for welcoming you home along a narrow London terrace front path. The medium, clearly sweet fragrance sits in the air after showers, creating a post‑rain ambience that feels both calm and refined. Grafted stock is not required: as an own‑root plant, it builds long‑term resilience, with a steady development arc from establishing roots in year one, stronger shoots in year two, to full ornamental value by year three. Light green foliage, a gently upright habit and sparse prickles support relaxed maintenance, while its consistent health and good winter hardiness mean less worry and more time to enjoy your small urban sanctuary.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point in a small London terrace |
The upright, hybrid‑tea form and pale yellow blooms create an elegant, welcoming accent in a narrow front border, staying in scale with modest plots while offering reliable long‑term structure for the design, ideal for the busy homeowner. |
| Cutting rose for indoor arrangements |
High‑centred, exhibition‑type flowers with long, straight stems make this variety particularly suited to cutting, letting you bring its soft colour and medium, sweet fragrance indoors for simple, charming bouquets appreciated by the style‑conscious beginner. |
| Low‑intervention family flower bed |
Good resistance to common fungal diseases and low general maintenance needs reduce the amount of spraying and fuss, suiting households that want reliable flowering without complex routines, especially attractive to the time‑pressed gardener. |
| Clay‑improved, rainwater‑fed mixed border |
Once drainage is modestly improved, the plant’s sturdy structure and winter hardiness perform well under typical British rainfall, fitting neatly into a sustainable, rainwater‑managed border concept valued by the climate‑aware urbanite. |
| Own-root long‑term feature shrub |
As an own‑root rose it grows from its own wood, avoiding graft‑union failures, regenerating well after pruning or weather damage and holding ornamental value over many years, particularly reassuring for the investment‑minded buyer. |
| Lightly formal path or driveway edging |
Regular spacing creates a discreet, upright line of blooms; sparse prickles make brushing past less of a concern, so access routes stay practical as well as attractive for families and their guests, ideal for the design‑led household. |
| Statement rose in a large container |
In a pot of at least 40–50 litres, its vertical habit and generous flowers read clearly from the street, turning balconies or paved front gardens into green features while remaining easy to look after for the container‑focused resident. |
| Season‑long colour anchor in mixed plantings |
Repeat flowering provides pale yellow accents from early summer onwards, giving continuity among perennials and herbs even as other plants come and go, a reassuring choice for those who value steady structure, especially the planning‑oriented owner. |
Styling ideas
- Townhouse Welcome – Line a short front path with CASANOVA spaced at 60–75 cm, underplanting with creeping thyme to soften the edges and enjoy a calm, elegant arrival – suited to terrace‑house owners.
- Balcony Feature – Grow a single plant in a 50‑litre container with trailing parsley and small‑leaved wintercreeper, creating a refined green column of bloom – ideal for flat dwellers with limited space.
- Soft Hedge – Plant a loose row at 40–50 cm intervals to mark a boundary, combining with low Nepeta or dwarf lavender for a gentle, scented partition – perfect for families wanting subtle structure.
- Cutting Corner – Dedicate a sunny corner to 3–5 plants for regular cutting, filling gaps with sage and herbs for foliage contrast and extra fragrance – appealing to home florists and hobby arrangers.
- Calm Clay Border – In improved clay, mix CASANOVA with airy perennials and evergreen Euonymus fortunei ‘Minimus’ to keep winter interest while roses provide seasonal height – designed for low‑effort urban borders.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose marketed as CASANOVA – pale yellow hybrid tea rose – McGredy; ARS exhibition name ‘Casanova’; unregistered cultivar name; own‑root form supplied in 2‑litre containers. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Samuel Darragh McGredy IV in England in 1957; ‘Queen Elizabeth’ × ‘Perfecta’; introduced 1964 in the United Kingdom through Fisons Horticulture Ltd; part of the hybrid tea rose group. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised with a Certificate of Merit at the Geneva Rose Trials in 1963, confirming its garden and exhibition value among contemporary hybrid teas and supporting confidence in its long‑term performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright habit reaching about 100–140 cm in height with 55–85 cm spread; medium‑density, light green foliage; sparsely thorned stems; faded blooms persist and normally require deadheading by hand. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, high‑centred hybrid tea blooms with 26–39 petals, borne mainly singly on stems; good repeat‑flowering with abundant second flush; classic pointed buds suitable for cutting and exhibition‑style displays. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pale straw to cream yellow flowers (ARS LY; RHS 12B inner, 11D outer); colour fades towards cream‑white in strong sun; best effect is a soft, uniform lemon‑cream display over the full bloom period. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium strength, clearly perceptible sweet fragrance typical of classic hybrid teas; noticeable both in the garden and in cut stems indoors, adding sensory value without becoming overpowering in small spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose hips form only occasionally because of the full, double flower form; when present they are small, ovoid, orange‑red hips around 10–14 mm in diameter, giving modest late‑season decorative interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7; USDA 6b; Swedish zone 3); good resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust under typical UK conditions; weaker tolerance of prolonged heat and drought. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Prefers sunny positions with well‑drained, enriched soil; spacing 40–75 cm depending on use; plant 4.0–4.6 plants/m² for massing; deadhead spent blooms; avoid hot, exposed, drought‑prone sites where colour and form suffer. |
CASANOVA offers repeat flowering, an elegant cutting shape and dependable own‑root resilience, making it a thoughtful choice for small, sustainable gardens where you would like lasting structure and gentle colour.