SOURIRE DU HAVRE – salmon‑orange hybrid tea rose – Panozzo
Imagine your London front garden after rain: glossy foliage catching droplets, salmon blooms opening in gentle waves and an easy-care rose quietly thriving even where heavy clay needs thoughtful drainage in wetter spells. SOURIRE DU HAVRE is a modern hybrid tea bred in France, grown on its own roots for dependable longevity, neat structure and calm, steady growth in typical family gardens. Large, very double rosette flowers bring a softly glowing colour shift from warm orange to creamy peach-pink, ideal for “girly” urban spaces that still feel grown-up and sustainable. In a 2‑litre pharmaROSA® ORIGINAL pot, it offers a reassuringly simple start: first establishing roots, then building confident shoots, and by the third season delivering its full ornamental impact with minimal extra work.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden feature rose |
The upright habit and dense, dark green foliage create a tidy, vertical accent beside a path or front door, with salmon‑orange flowers providing a welcoming focus that remains proportionate to smaller urban plots – ideal for the time‑pressed homeowner. |
| Decorative container on terrace or balcony |
Well-suited to a single statement pot of at least 40–50 litres, SOURIRE DU HAVRE forms a compact, elegant bush with stable flowering from its own-root system, keeping ornamental value high even if exposed to wind in raised or balcony positions – reassuring for the cautious beginner. |
| Small bed in clay or challenging soil |
Once drainage is improved with grit or organic matter, this own-root rose settles reliably into typical British clay, gradually forming a robust framework that copes with wet spells and resumes growth well after winter, which suits those managing heavier ground gardeners. |
| Cut-flower row in a family garden |
Long, straight stems with solitary, large rosette blooms make SOURIRE DU HAVRE a natural for home-cut flowers; regular picking encourages further buds, giving a steady supply for vases without complex pruning routines – appealing to relaxed cut-flower enthusiasts. |
| Low, formal line or path edging |
Planted at 50–60 cm intervals, its consistent height and uniform habit allow a soft, low hedge effect, helping to define paths while retaining an informal, romantic look that blends with perennials and grasses – attractive for style-conscious urban planners. |
| Mixed border with perennials |
The warm salmon-orange and peach tones combine beautifully with lavender, nepeta or sage, helping you create a cohesive, sustainable border where foliage and flower shapes balance rather than compete, particularly in smaller, view-from-the-window spaces for design-minded owners. |
| Rain-aware, sustainable front garden |
Its dense canopy and sturdy framework integrate well into planting schemes that slow and capture rainfall, especially where heavy clay needs thoughtful drainage in wetter spells, supporting a greener, less paved frontage for eco-conscious city residents. |
| Long-term, low-effort specimen plant |
As an own-root rose, SOURIRE DU HAVRE ages gracefully, regrowing from its base after harsh winters or accidental damage, so you avoid graft suckers and frequent replacements, gaining a stable, long-lived focal point that suits busy but committed garden keepers. |
Styling ideas
- Pastel-Pathway – Line a narrow front path with repeated plants underplanted with soft pink tulips, creating a “girly” welcome that still feels composed – for terrace-house front-garden owners.
- Balcony-Boudoir – Grow a single bush in a 50‑litre pot with trailing variegated ivy to soften the edges, turning a small balcony into an elegant outdoor room – for flat-dwellers seeking calm.
- Coastal-Compact – Combine with hardy lavender and low grasses in a windy, exposed border, letting foliage texture steady the scheme while the rose carries the colour – for coastal homeowners.
- Peach-Parterre – Use repeating triangles of SOURIRE DU HAVRE with sage and nepeta to form a mini parterre that reads clearly from an upstairs window – for design-led small-garden gardeners.
- Family-Cutting – Dedicate a short row to this rose beside herbs, encouraging children to help pick fragrant stems for the kitchen table – for family gardens with budding young florists.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Modern hybrid tea rose; registered as PANaldap, marketed as SOURIRE DU HAVRE hybrid tea rose PANaldap, classified in the hybrid tea exhibition group, suitable for garden and cutting use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Bernard Panozzo in France and introduced in 2011 by Star de Doué and Pétales de Roses; part of a modern range focused on responsible gardening and consistent ornamental quality. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy plant 80–110 cm high and 60–85 cm wide, with dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickles, forming a well-filled, compact shrub that suits beds, edging and containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, very double rosette flowers over 7 cm across, usually solitary on stems; over 40 petals; remontant with a notably abundant second flush, ideal for decorative use and regular home cutting. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Warm salmon-orange blooms with pink veiling; buds intense orange-salmon, opening to a sulphur-yellow centre, then uniform salmon and finally creamy pink-orange with peach shades as flowers age. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very faint and barely perceptible, with only a light sweet, fruity nuance in warm, still weather; chosen primarily for colour effect and flower form rather than for strong scent impact. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small hips 10–14 mm long, ovoid and orange-red when formed; not a heavy hip producer, so fruiting interest is modest and does not usually dominate the plant’s late-season appearance. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately –26 to –23 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 4, USDA 5b); disease resistance medium to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, benefiting from normal, preventative rose care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with improved drainage on clay; spacing 50–90 cm depending on use, 2.8–3.2 plants/m² for mass planting; medium maintenance with occasional plant protection and regular deadheading. |
SOURIRE DU HAVRE offers compact structure, repeat flowering and long-lived own-root reliability, making it a thoughtful choice for an easy-care, enduring rose in a family or urban garden.