NOELIA – orange hybrid tea rose
Step off the pavement and into a gentler world with Noelia, an upright hybrid tea rose whose glowing orange‑to‑peach blooms bring a quietly luxurious rhythm to a small London front garden. Bred for endurance, it offers season‑long flowering with low‑effort care, even where gardens face cool winds and heavy soils that need thoughtful drainage after rain. The long, straight stems are ideal for bouquets, yet the compact habit suits narrow beds, containers and townhouse plots. As an own‑root rose it is built for longevity, regrowing reliably from its base and keeping an even shape over many years with minimal pruning. Over time the petals shift from vivid mandarin to a softer peach‑cream palette, echoing the calm of a sustainable, foliage‑rich planting. In the first seasons roots establish, then stronger shoots follow, before full ornamental value truly unfolds by the third year.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Terraced-house front garden focal point |
The upright, medium-height habit and large classic blooms give a clear focal point without overwhelming narrow front beds, while low maintenance needs suit busy city life and limited gardening time, ideal for the urban homeowner |
| Rain-aware, small urban border |
This rose copes well where cool winds and heavier UK soils mean you plan for good drainage, pairing neatly with gravel mulches and rain‑friendly planting to keep a tidy, practical edge for the sustainability-focused gardener |
| Cutting patch for home bouquets |
Long, straight stems and very full, cup-shaped flowers provide reliable material for vases and simple wedding-style arrangements, so even a short row gives generous indoor colour to the creative flower lover |
| Container planting on patio or balcony (50–70 L) |
A large, well-drained 50–70 litre planter lets the own-root plant form a stable framework, giving repeat flushes with only basic feeding and deadheading, making rose growing accessible for the beginner gardener |
| Low-intervention family garden bed |
Good overall disease resistance and hardy growth reduce spraying and complex pruning, so a single planting can stay attractive for years with minimal effort from the time-poor parent |
| Long-term structural rose in mixed border |
The even, upright form and medium-density foliage integrate well with perennials, and own-root resilience supports gradual regeneration, offering a dependable framework for the long-range planner |
| Colour-gradient feature with soft perennials |
The shifting orange to peach-cream-pink tones blend beautifully with grasses, dusk-coloured verbena or pale feverfew, giving a nuanced, feminine look appreciated by the romantic stylist |
| Compact hedge or repeat-flowering line |
Remontant flowering and uniform, upright growth make neat, low hedging at 40–50 cm spacing, giving a structured, long-season display valued by the orderly garden owner |
Styling ideas
- Soft-Entrance Border – Line a narrow front path with Noelia underplanted with lavender and low grasses for a fragrant, rain-permeable welcome – ideal for the style-conscious terraced-house owner
- Balcony-Couture – Grow one plant in a 50–70 litre container with trailing thyme and nepeta for a tailored, low-care statement – perfect for the busy apartment dweller
- Wedding-Cut Patch – Combine a short row of Noelia with white cosmos and feathery fennel to create home-grown bouquet material – suited to the home florist planning small events
- Calm-Colour Drift – Mix Noelia with soft pink salvia and airy verbena for a gentle orange-to-peach wash that glows at sunset – appealing to the evening garden appreciator
- Structured-Family Bed – Plant a trio with evergreen shrubs and groundcover sage for a low-upkeep, all-season frame – designed for families wanting order without intensive maintenance
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Noelia hybrid tea rose, commercial group Hybrid Tea; current trade name Noelia Hybrid tea rose pharmaROSA®, own-root container-grown form for UK family gardens and small urban spaces. |
| Origin and breeding |
Hybrid tea rose discovered in Hungary in 2016, introduced by PharmaRosa® Ltd. in 2021; parentage and original breeding institution unknown, selected for garden and cutting use. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised as Novelty of the Year at FlowerExpo Moscow 2021, reflecting its distinctive orange-peach colour range and garden-cut flower versatility in an international exhibition context. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy habit 95–125 cm tall, 60–80 cm spread, medium-density mid-green foliage with a slightly glossy surface, moderately thorny stems, suitable for beds, hedging and large containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, very full, cup-shaped hybrid tea blooms with 40+ petals, mainly borne singly on stems; remontant with abundant second flush, giving a long calendar of classic, formal flowers for cutting. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vibrant orange base with pink-toned sheen; buds deep mandarin-peach, ageing through golden-orange centres to peach-cream and pink edges, with moderate colour retention and a softening pastel finish. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak and neutral, offering only a light, unobtrusive scent; chosen more for visual impact and cutting performance than for strong perfume in the garden or in the vase. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small ovoid hips, 10–14 mm, orange-red (RHS N34A); ornamental interest is modest and hips are not produced in heavy quantities under normal deadheading regimes. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated hardy to approximately -21 to -18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3), with reported resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust under typical Central European conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Plant 40–75 cm apart depending on use; prefers well-drained soil, especially on heavier clays, and benefits from regular deadheading; maintenance generally low for an upright hybrid tea rose. |
Noelia Hybrid tea rose pharmaROSA® brings season-long colour, low-maintenance structure and long-lived own-root reliability to compact family gardens and balconies, and is well worth considering as a calm, enduring feature plant.