CHATEAU MYRTILLE – light lilac hybrid tea rose - Teranishi
Step off the pavement and into a front garden of tranquil colour with CHATEAU MYRTILLE, a refined hybrid tea rose whose cool lilac blooms carry a delicate, tea-like fragrance after rain. Bred in Japan by Teranishi and supplied as a premium own-root plant, it settles steadily and lives long, offering reliable flowering even where heavy soils need careful drainage and wet, windy weather can test lesser roses. Its upright habit, glossy dark foliage and exhibition-style buds give a quietly elegant structure to compact London plots and containers, while semi-double flowers with visible stamens create a gently wildlife-friendly focal point. Low input, durable growth means less time pruning and spraying, more time enjoying softly shifting lilac tones that weather to silvery-lilac. In its own-root form it establishes firm foundations for a genuinely long-lived plant, moving naturally from root-building in the first year to stronger shoots in the second and full display by the third for a truly sustainable city rose.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Small London front garden border |
The compact, upright habit and medium height make CHATEAU MYRTILLE ideal for narrow terraced-house front borders, adding structure without overwhelming the space, especially where owners value understated elegance and need straightforward care for a busy beginner |
| Feature rose in a large container |
Its hybrid tea form with solitary, exhibition-style blooms works beautifully in a 40–50 litre pot, where own-root vigour supports long-term container life and the soft lilac colour pairs easily with slate, brick and contemporary hard landscaping for a design-conscious urbanite |
| Low-maintenance family rose bed |
Good resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust keeps this rose attractive with minimal spraying, while the restrained height suits family planting schemes where children play nearby and reliable performance is valued by a time-pressed homeowner |
| Cutting patch for home-arranged flowers |
The high-centred, pointed buds and long-stemmed solitary flowers are classic hybrid tea material, providing elegant stems for vases, table settings or gifts without needing specialist exhibition skills, perfectly suiting a creative home florist |
| Rainwater-conscious front garden scheme |
Its moderate drought tolerance and preference for steady moisture fit neatly with rainwater-harvesting beds where heavy showers and gusty weather demand roses that cope with exposed, changeable conditions, making it reassuring for a sustainability-minded gardener |
| Long-term focal point by a path or doorway |
Own-root growth builds a durable framework that regenerates well after hard pruning or winter damage, so the plant maintains shape and flower quality year after year in a prominent position, giving peace of mind to a long-range planner |
| Softly pollinator-friendly mixed border |
Semi-double blooms with accessible stamens offer moderate nectar interest without the mess of overblown doubles, fitting designs that blend ornamental value with gentle wildlife support, especially appreciated by a nature-aware beginner |
| Refined evening seating area |
The mild, tea-like scent and cool, smoky mauve-lilac petals that fade to silvery tones read beautifully in twilight, while its generally low maintenance lets you simply sit and unwind after work, an appealing prospect for a relaxation-seeking resident |
Styling ideas
- Lilac Ribbon Border – Plant a short, repeating line of CHATEAU MYRTILLE along a front path, underplant with soft Nepeta and low Carex for movement and easy care – ideal for the understated city front-garden owner
- Container Courtyard Calm – One rose in a 50‑litre clay pot with silver thyme and sedum at the base creates a long-lived, low-input focal point – perfect for a balcony or paved-yard dweller
- Cutting Corner – Group three plants in a sunny bed with airy grasses to harvest elegant stems without sacrificing garden impact – suited to hobby florists who like spontaneous bouquets
- Evening Lilac Nook – Place near a bench with lavender and soft white perennials so the silvery-lilac blooms and gentle scent frame your evening pause – appealing to those who see the garden as a quiet retreat
- Rainwise Front Garden – Combine with sedges, gravel and permeable paving so runoff soaks into planting pockets around the rose, which then thrives with captured rain – ideal for sustainability-focused townhouse gardeners
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose cultivar CHATEAU MYRTILLE, trade name “Chateau Myrtille Hybrid tea rose Teranishi”; name of French origin meaning “Blueberry Castle”; own-root, 2‑litre pharmaROSA ORIGINAL format. |
| Origin and breeding |
Hybrid tea bred in Japan by Kikuo Teranishi around 2008; parentage unknown; introduced 2008; distributed as a premium garden rose despite original cut-flower style, adapted to private garden use. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, compact bush reaching about 70–95 cm high and 45–65 cm wide, with moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickliness; suited to borders, low hedging and larger containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, high-centred, pointed-budded hybrid tea flowers on mainly solitary stems; around 13–25 petals; large blooms (approximately 7–10 cm), remontant with a generous second flush in suitable conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Smoky, cool-toned mauve-lilac; buds glaucous silvery-lilac with mauve tips; open flowers mid-purple with greyish veil, then lightening to silvery-lilac and finally almost silvery-white edges as they age. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, refined, tea-like fragrance; not overpowering near seating or entrances yet noticeable at close range and particularly pleasant after rainfall, suiting those who prefer subtle rather than strongly perfumed roses. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms small hips of 0–5 mm diameter; moderate set with some ornamental interest late in the season but usually not a dominant visual feature compared with the flowers and foliage. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Good resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; winter hardy to around −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b); tolerates moderate heat and drought but benefits from regular watering in dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun and well-drained soil, including improved clay; spacing 45–85 cm depending on use; suitable for borders, containers (40–50 litres or more), solitary planting and light-maintenance family gardens. |
CHATEAU MYRTILLE offers cool lilac hybrid tea blooms, low-maintenance disease resistance and long-lived own-root growth, making it a thoughtful choice for compact, sustainable gardens and calm city front spaces.