FREDERIC MISTRAL ® – pink hybrid tea rose – Meilland
Imagine your London front garden after rain, when paving glistens and a single tall rose carries an intoxicating fragrance down the narrow path. FREDERIC MISTRAL ® is bred for generous, XL blooms on an upright framework, offering exhibition-style flowers without fussy care. Once established, it copes calmly with damp, changeable weather and heavier soils, helping it stay reliable in blustery, coastal-influenced conditions and typical urban clay. The dense, dark green foliage and long life on its own roots keep your planting looking balanced and mature, while the rose slowly builds from strong roots to impressive flowers over three seasons. With low routine needs, good health and a quietly luxurious presence, this pastel-pink hybrid tea suits rainwater-conscious, small city plots that must stay attractive with minimal effort.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Statement rose for a small front garden |
The tall, upright habit and XL pastel-pink blooms create an elegant focal point that reads clearly from the pavement, even in a narrow terraced-house frontage. One well-placed plant gives high impact with minimal fuss for the beginner. |
| Low-maintenance feature near paths and seating |
This rose offers very strong, garden-filling scent with few maintenance tasks beyond basic pruning and feeding, so you enjoy perfumed evenings without constant tending, ideal for busy urban gardeners seeking sensory reward for the time-poor. |
| Long-lived specimen in a mixed border |
Grafted-free, own-root growth means the plant ages steadily and can regenerate from its base if damaged, supporting a long service life and stable appearance in a family border, a reassuring choice for the long-term. |
| Cutting patch for home bouquets |
Hybrid tea form, solitary stems and very double flowers are perfect for cutting, providing classic vase roses with fragrance reminiscent of traditional perfume, rewarding small-space growers who value home-produced arrangements for the home-lover. |
| Rainwater-aware front garden design |
Once established, its good heat and moderate drought tolerance pair well with permeable surfaces and rainwater retention, supporting planting schemes where surface water is managed on site and maintenance stays simple for the sustainability-minded. |
| Large container on balcony or patio |
In a 40–50 litre or larger peat-free container, its upright shape, sparse thorns and dense foliage give structure without dominating the space, bringing scent and bloom to balconies and courtyards that can only host a few key plants for the city-dweller. |
| Roses for cooler, exposed UK sites |
Strong winter hardiness and generally resistant foliage support reliable performance in typical British conditions, including windy, damp spells that challenge less robust roses, keeping the display presentable through unsettled seasons for the practical. |
| Soft-structured, romantic borders |
The rosette-shaped, very double flowers and gentle pink–cream colour lend a romantic, “girly” look that blends beautifully with lavender, nepeta or sage, softening hard edges and paving in compact London gardens for the romantic. |
Styling ideas
- Perfumed-Path – Line a short front path with one or two plants underplanted with nepeta and low thyme, letting their scent mingle with the rose on damp evenings – ideal for fragrance-focused homeowners.
- Balcony-Boudoir – Grow in a 50-litre clay pot with trailing Euonymus fortunei ‘Minimus’ to soften the rim, creating a soft-pink, feminine focal point – perfect for terrace or balcony gardeners.
- Pastel-Border – Set as a tall accent among lavender, sage and airy grasses, allowing the pale blooms to float above silvery foliage – suited to those upgrading a small, sunny family border.
- Cutting-Corner – Dedicate a sunny bed with three plants at recommended spacing, giving a steady supply of long-stemmed, perfumed flowers for the house – appealing to home florists.
- Rain-Garden – Combine with Crocosmia ‘Lucifer’ and Liatris ‘Kobold’ in a free-draining, rain-fed front bed where paving has been reduced, supporting attractive, resilient planting – aimed at sustainability-minded city gardeners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as MEItebros; marketed as Frederic Mistral ® Perfumella® MEItebros, with ARS exhibition name ‘Frédéric Mistral’, premium gold authenticity-verified stock. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in France by Alain Meilland (Meilland International SA) in 1994 from (Perfume Delight × Prima Ballerina) × The McCartney Rose; registered 1998 and later introduced via Conard-Pyle. |
| Awards and recognition |
Celebrated for fragrance: Baden-Baden Fragrance Award 1993; Monza Fragrance Award 1994; Le Roeulx Fragrance Award 1994; Belfast Most Fragrant Rose Award 1996. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy plant 130–170 cm tall and 100–140 cm wide with dense, slightly glossy dark green foliage and sparse prickles; best with ample light and room to express its height. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, XL rosette blooms with 40+ petals borne mainly solitary on long stems; remontant with a notably abundant second flush, giving extended ornamental value in-season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Clear soft pastel pink (ARS LPe, RHS 65C/65D) with pearlescent effect, buds pale pink and silky; flowers fade gradually to off-white with creamy tones, maintaining a refined, uniform display. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very strong, garden-filling, perfumed fragrance of classic, intoxicating character; bred as a perfumed hybrid tea suitable for ornamental planting and cutting where scent is a key feature. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small ovoid red hips, around 10–14 mm, providing modest late-season ornamental interest without significantly reducing overall flowering or detracting from the floral display. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Highly winter-hardy (approx. –26 to –23 °C; RHS H7, Swedish zone 4, USDA 5b) with resistant foliage against black spot, powdery mildew and rust in well-sited gardens. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to borders, specimens, hedged lines and large containers; plant at 100–180 cm spacing, in fertile, well-drained soil, using peat-free mixes and regular watering during establishment. |
FREDERIC MISTRAL ® offers tall, scented hybrid tea blooms, low ongoing care and long-lived own-root reliability; an assured choice if you want enduring elegance in a modest urban garden.