KIZUNA – apricot nostalgic rose – Massad (Les Provençelles®)
On a small London terrace or family front garden, KIZUNA surrounds you with romantic rosettes and a strong, classic scent that lingers after summer rain, while its own-root longevity and steady structure help it settle reliably even where soils are heavy and wet and the weather brings blustery showers. Large, very full blooms open repeatedly from late spring, creating a long season of colour for low-effort weekend gardening, especially when you simply water in dry spells and prune once a year. In a generous 40–50 litre container or border, this upright shrub builds a calm rhythm of flowering stems over several seasons, with year one focused on roots, year two on vigorous shoots and year three revealing full ornamental impact and enduring garden character.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point |
Upright, dense growth and XL, nostalgic rosette flowers give strong visual presence in a modest front garden, ideal beside a path or bay window where you pass daily and appreciate the changing pastel tones – perfect for the busy homeowner. |
| Feature container (40–50 L or larger) |
In a large, well-drained pot, you can manage watering and plant protection more easily, while enjoying its repeated, large blooms and fragrance right by a doorstep or seating area, keeping premium looks in a compact footprint – ideal for the urban balcony-owner. |
| Romantic mixed border |
The very full, peach-pink flowers blend beautifully with soft perennials, creating a “girly”, nostalgic effect; planting in a sunny, airy position with good spacing improves air circulation, supporting healthier foliage – reassuring for the style-conscious beginner. |
| Cut-flower corner |
Long, upright stems with large, strongly scented blooms are excellent for home-cut bunches; by growing it in a dedicated spot, you can prune and treat more intensively without affecting the rest of the garden – attractive for the home flower-arranger. |
| Clay-soil improvement bed |
Where gardens sit on heavy clay, raised beds or improved planting holes with added sharp grit and organic matter provide the drainage and root run this own-root shrub needs to establish and flower reliably in showery, breezy conditions – practical for the rain-aware gardener. |
| Small hedge or boundary strip |
Planted at the recommended spacing, its dense, glossy foliage and repeat flowering can form an elegant low hedge; regular preventative spraying and winter clean-up help maintain a neat, long-lived line of shrubs – useful for the orderly garden-planner. |
| Scented seating area |
Placed near a bench or terrace, its strong, lingering fragrance and large, double blooms create an intimate, evening-friendly corner; a simple yearly prune and scheduled treatments keep the display dependable – appealing to the relaxation-seeker. |
| Collector’s romantic rose bed |
As a Dominique Massad shrub with complex colouring and classic perfume, KIZUNA suits curated beds where you accept higher disease care in exchange for distinctive character and form, planning routine protection as part of the hobby – rewarding for the rose enthusiast. |
Styling ideas
- Pastel Welcome – Pair KIZUNA with Nepeta and low lavender in a narrow front border for a soft, feminine entrance with repeating apricot and blue tones – ideal for terrace-house front-garden owners.
- Balcony Salon – Grow one plant in a 50 litre pot with trailing thyme and sedum at the base to soften the rim and make watering and care easy – suited to design-aware city balcony gardeners.
- Romantic Ribbon – Create a low hedge along a garden path and underplant with Dianthus plumarius to echo the nostalgic rose form and scent – perfect for homeowners who enjoy classic, orderly layouts.
- Sunset Nook – Place KIZUNA by a south-facing bench with Penstemon ‘Husker Red’ and ornamental grasses, letting the apricot rosettes glow against burgundy foliage – for those who savour evening fragrance outdoors.
- Collector’s Quartet – Group several shrubs in a dedicated rose bed with complementary nostalgic varieties, accepting regular spraying in return for a concentrated romantic display – aimed at committed rose collectors.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Shrub rose, nostalgia/romantic group; registered as MASkizu, marketed as Kizuna Les Provençelles® MASkizu; exhibition name Kizuna; name symbolises togetherness and solidarity with 2011 Japan earthquake victims. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Dominique Massad in France from ‘Versigny’ × ‘Jocelyne Salavert’; breeding and registration dated 2012, commercial introduction in Central Europe around 2013 via Pétales de Roses. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright shrub 100–140 cm tall and 50–80 cm wide, with dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickles; forms a structured, medium-sized bush suitable for borders, hedging and specimen planting. |
| Flower morphology |
Very full, XL rosette blooms with 40+ petals, borne in corymbs; remontant habit with abundant second flush after the main flowering, providing a long ornamental season for garden and cutting use. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Peach to creamy apricot flowers with soft salmon tones; buds deep apricot, opening to pastel peach-pink with slightly yellower centre; colour lightens evenly and may pale slightly in strong sun yet retains good overall stability. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, long-lasting, classic rose fragrance that persists well on the plant and in the vase; intense enough to perfume nearby seating areas and effective for scented bouquets cut at early opening stage. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms small quantities of ellipsoid orange-red hips, around 8–12 mm in diameter; hips add modest late-season interest but are not a dominant ornamental feature compared with the repeated flowering. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Fully hardy to about −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4) but very susceptible to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; benefits from regular preventive fungicide regime and good hygiene. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; water during prolonged dry spells and feed in spring; due to high disease pressure, plan scheduled plant-protection and yearly pruning to maintain health and flowering. |
KIZUNA brings large, fragrant nostalgic blooms, a structured, long-lived own-root shrub form and dependable winter hardiness; consider it if you are ready to pair beauty with a little extra care.