CHANDON ROSIER – red hybrid tea rose – Delbard
Step out after rain along a narrow front path and meet a rose bred for balance between elegance and practicality: CHANDON ROSIER offers easy-care upright growth, moderate maintenance needs and dark, glossy foliage that holds its shape in wind and wet spells typical of many British gardens. Its medium-sized, ruby red, high-centred blooms open repeatedly through the season with a clear, spicy-fruity fragrance ideal for cutting and bringing indoors. As an own-root plant it establishes steadily and can regenerate from the base, supporting a genuinely long-lived lifespan in small urban plots or narrow terraced-house front gardens that rely on careful rainwater use and good drainage on heavier soils. Planted once and allowed to thicken, the first year is for building roots, the second for strong new shoots, and by the third season it delivers full ornamental impact with dependable flowering and a composed, sustainable presence.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Narrow London terraced-house front garden |
The upright, relatively narrow habit and medium height let you line a slim path or small frontage without overwhelming the space, while the clear red blooms create a tidy, formal welcome for busy urban garden owners |
| Feature rose in a mixed flower bed |
Planted as a specimen at about 80 cm spacing, the repeat-flowering, high-centred blooms and glossy dark foliage provide a stable focal point that works well with perennials, settling into a long-term structure for hobby gardeners |
| Cutting patch or cutting row |
The pointed-budded, hybrid tea form and medium stem length are ideal for vases; remontant flowering ensures you can cut through summer while the shrub retains enough colour outdoors for flower-loving homeowners |
| Container or large pot by the front door |
In a 40–50 litre peat-free container with regular watering, its upright form and moderate maintenance needs give you classic rose blooms at eye level, without demanding complex pruning from beginners |
| Rainwater-conscious, sustainable front garden |
Planted into improved clay or chalk with good drainage, it copes with rainy spells and responds well to stored rainwater, fitting neatly into modest, climate-aware planting plans for sustainability-focused city dwellers |
| Long-term framework rose for small family gardens |
As an own-root plant it thickens from the base, can regenerate after hard pruning and avoids the graft problems of older roses, giving a stable, long-lived structure suited to families planning ahead |
| Structured rose hedge or row |
At 40–50 cm spacing it forms a low, upright line of dark foliage and red blooms, ideal along drives or boundaries where you want rhythm and order without high clipping demands for time-poor homeowners |
| Weather-exposed coastal or windy sites |
The dense foliage, moderate height and robust stems help it hold its shape and flower display in blustery, wet conditions often found in more open, wind-prone gardens for coastal-region gardeners |
Styling ideas
- Front-Door Classic – Place one plant in a large 40–50 litre pot, underplanted with silver-leaved sage to echo the petal reverses – ideal for busy urban garden owners
- Crimson-Ribbon Border – Create a low hedge along a front path, interspersing every third rose with dwarf pines for year-round structure – perfect for families wanting neat kerb appeal
- Evening-Cut Corner – Dedicate a sunny bed to CHANDON ROSIER with nepeta and lavender, so you can cut scented stems while bees enjoy the companions – suited to hobby gardeners
- Rain-Garden Accent – Position on a slight mound in a raingarden-style front plot, with blue sedges and moisture-tolerant perennials around – for sustainability-minded city front-garden owners
- Formal-Focus Pot – Flank steps or a small terrace with matching large containers, each with one rose and low creeping thyme as a living mulch – great for beginners seeking simple symmetry
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose from the Grands Coloris collection; registered as DELatur, marketed as CHANDON ROSIER and Alleluia®, exhibition-type cut-flower hybrid tea with premium silver quality rating. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Georges Delbard in France from complex hybrid tea parentage including Impeccable, Papa Meilland, Gloire de Rome and Corrida; introduced internationally from 1982 via selected nurseries. |
| Awards and recognition |
Bagatelle (Paris) Certificat de Mérite 1980, plus multiple show honours including King of Show awards in North American rose society exhibitions, confirming strong exhibition potential. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, medium-tall bush 100–140 cm high and 50–70 cm wide with dense, dark green, glossy foliage and moderate thorns; spent blooms persist and generally need deadheading for best display. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, high-centred, pointed hybrid tea blooms borne mainly singly; 26–39 petals, fully double, with remontant flowering and a particularly abundant second flush in suitable conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep velvety red upper petal surfaces with silver-tinged, pinkish reverses; colour holds reasonably, shifting toward warm burgundy tones in strong sun, with only moderate lightening as flowers age. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength, clearly perceptible scent combining spicy and fruity notes, noticeable both outdoors and when cut for the vase, adding sensory interest without being overpowering in small spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally light due to double flowers, but where pollinated it can produce small spherical orange-red hips around 10–14 mm in diameter that add discreet seasonal interest in autumn. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H6 with approximate hardiness to about −15 °C; disease resistance moderate to common fungal issues, so benefits from good air circulation and occasional preventive care in humid summers. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; space 40–80 cm depending on use, water regularly in dry spells, deadhead to encourage repeats, and prune annually to maintain shape and vigour. |
CHANDON ROSIER offers classic red exhibition blooms, an upright, easy-care habit and long own-root longevity, making it a thoughtful, enduring choice for those refining a small garden or front path planting.