Lavanila hybrid tea rose – pharmaROSA® ORIGINAL 2-litre own-root
Imagine your London front garden after rain: a narrow path, glistening paving and the rich, velvety blooms of Lavanila holding their colour in changeable weather as you brush past a wave of strong, sweet-spicy fragrance. This hybrid tea rose offers generous repeat flowering on a naturally bushy, balanced habit, ideal where space is limited but impact matters. Grown on its own roots, it builds a deep, resilient lifespan with stable ornamental value and good ability to regenerate after pruning or minor mishaps. In a rainwater-conscious family garden on heavier soils, its medium disease resistance and black spot resilience help keep care simple. Give it a year to anchor its roots, a second to strengthen its shoots, and by the third year you can expect the full, romantic show of velvety wine-red flowers along your path or terrace.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small London front garden feature |
The upright, bushy shape and medium height make Lavanila easy to place beside a path or bay window without overwhelming a compact plot, giving a strong vertical accent that stays in scale with typical terraced-house front gardens for the beginner. |
| Rainwater-conscious rose border on heavier soil |
Lavanila’s own-root robustness pairs well with mulched, rainwater-fed borders where you improve drainage once and then largely leave it to get on with things – particularly useful in wetter, wind-exposed situations on typical British clay for the busy homeowner. |
| Long-season family flower bed |
With a reliable second flush of blooms, this rose helps keep borders colourful from early summer well into autumn, so there is nearly always something to enjoy and to cut for the house without complicated pruning routines for the time-poor. |
| Scented seating area or balcony container (40–50 litres+) |
The strong, sweet–spicy perfume carries beautifully around a seating corner; in a large, at least 40–50 litre peat-free container it forms a stable, long-lived focal point when combined with regular watering from saved rainwater for the scent-lover. |
| Pollinator-friendly mixed planting |
Although double, the partly open blooms expose their stamens enough to offer moderate forage, especially when underplanted with bee-favourites like low lavender or nepeta, creating a visually lush yet wildlife-aware scheme for the eco-conscious. |
| Low-maintenance rose-and-lavender strip |
Medium disease resistance, especially good black spot tolerance, means Lavanila slots well into simple rose-and-lavender runs where you want clean foliage and classic colour with only occasional plant protection as needed for the pragmatist. |
| Long-lived structural rose in a family garden |
As an own-root plant it can regenerate from the base if cut back hard, avoiding the worry of grafted suckers and supporting a stable, many-year presence that matures gently with the rest of the garden for the long-term planner. |
| Romantic “girly” front garden with year-round interest |
The velvety wine-red flowers, glossy mid-green foliage and neat hips combine with small evergreens and soft perennials to give colour, structure and seasonal charm even in coastal, wetter or wind-touched streetscapes for the style-conscious. |
Styling ideas
- Velvet-Entrance – Line a short front path with two or three Lavanila plants and low-growing lavender, letting the red blooms and purple haze frame your doorway – ideal for design-aware urban homeowners.
- Rainwise-Border – Create a slightly raised, mulched strip on clay, planting Lavanila with nepeta and dwarf euonymus to enjoy good colour and scent from mostly rainwater – suited to sustainability-focused families.
- Balcony-Boudoir – In a single 50-litre container, underplant Lavanila with trailing thyme for a chic, scented focal point that is easy to water and maintain – perfect for busy city flat-dwellers.
- Ruby-Hedge – Space plants at around 55 cm to form a loose, flowering screen, backing them with Japanese spindle for evergreen structure – appealing to those wanting privacy with minimal fuss.
- Classic-Companion – Mix Lavanila into a small mixed bed of roses and perennials, where its repeat flowering and hips extend interest beyond peak rose season – great for beginners building their first “proper” border.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Lavanila is a hybrid tea rose marketed as Lavanila Hybrid tea rose pharmaROSA®, within the Hybrid Tea group; exact registered cultivar name and exhibition listings are not currently documented. |
| Origin and breeding |
Discovered and selected by PharmaRosa®, with breeding work in Germany in 2007, and introduced to the market via PharmaRosa® Ltd. in Hungary; precise registration and introduction dates remain unpublished. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
A bushy, upright shrub reaching about 100–140 cm high and 75–105 cm wide, with dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate thorns, forming a full, balanced presence in mixed borders or as a solo feature. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, double, cupped blooms with roughly 26–39 petals appear in clusters, with a dependable repeat that brings a generous second flush under normal garden care and regular deadheading where desired. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Closed buds are deep ruby-burgundy; newly opened flowers are rich wine-red with ruby flashes, then age through velvety deep red to mahogany-chestnut tones, the petal edges darkening slightly before the colour gently softens. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Possesses a strong, long-lasting perfume combining sweet and spicy notes, noticeable on warm, still days and especially effective near paths, doors or terraces where passers-by can easily appreciate its distinctive scent. |
| Hip characteristics |
After flowering, it can form moderately abundant, small ellipsoidal hips, around 10–14 mm across, ripening to an attractive orange-red and adding a subtle decorative accent in late season plantings. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated to around –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3), with medium overall disease resistance, notable black spot resistance, and average tolerance of powdery mildew and rust in typical garden conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Plant at 55–100 cm spacing depending on use, in well-prepared, drained but moisture-retentive soil; maintenance is moderate, with standard feeding and occasional plant protection sufficient for most UK family gardens. |
Lavanila Hybrid tea rose pharmaROSA® gives velvety, repeat flowering with strong fragrance on a long-lived, own-root shrub that settles in reliably over the years; consider it when you want lasting character from a single, thoughtful planting.