LA PALOMA 85 ® – white bedding floribunda rose – Evers
Step into a London front garden after rain and imagine a low, neat line of white blooms guiding you to the door: compact, evenly shaped shrubs that fit narrow spaces yet bring a calm, luminous focus. LA PALOMA 85 ® offers a familiar, reliable garden presence, forming a tidy, bushy structure that is easy to read in a small urban plot and suits rain-conscious planting where drainage must cope with heavy showers and heavier clay soils. Its dense, glossy dark-green foliage frames the snow-pure flowers, while remontant flowering ensures a generous second flush once the first wave has passed. The moderate height keeps it friendly for family gardens and front paths, and in a large container of at least 40–50 litres it becomes a long-lived own-root feature that settles in gently: roots in the first year, structure in the second, full ornamental value by the third, offering a balanced, quietly sustainable choice for busy homeowners.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Narrow London terraced-house front garden bed |
The bushy, upright yet compact habit fits slim borders along paths and railings without overwhelming the space, giving a clear, elegant line of white flowers that enhances kerb appeal for busy urban gardeners |
| Low, formal bedding scheme by the front door |
Uniform, medium-height plants and dense foliage create a tidy, long-lasting structure that feels reassuringly ordered, ideal for repeated planting in symmetrical beds for homeowners seeking neatness |
| Rainwater-friendly strip with improved drainage |
This rose copes well in typical British rain when planted in well-prepared soil with good runoff, integrating smoothly into front gardens designed to handle heavy showers and wetter spells for sustainability-minded households |
| Large container on balcony or hard standing |
In a 40–50 litre peat-free container, the compact shrub form and steady growth allow it to develop into a long-term feature; own-root plants regenerate better after stress, supporting space-conscious balcony owners |
| Mixed white-and-green “girly” border |
The pure snow-white flowers and dark, glossy foliage pair beautifully with soft greens and pastels, creating a gentle, romantic mood in small gardens that still need clean lines for style-aware beginners |
| Front-garden hedge or low boundary edge |
Recommended spacings allow you to form a low, coherent hedge, using the compact, bushy habit to define property edges while keeping sight-lines open for family-focused front-garden planners |
| Urban park-style planting in private gardens |
Originally bred as a bedding rose for repeated mass planting, it adapts well to private spaces that echo municipal borders, offering a familiar, classic look for gardeners wanting traditional charm |
| Long-term structural rose in a stable bed |
As an own-root shrub, it is not dependent on a graft union, so it builds a durable, integrated framework over the years, maintaining visual balance with fewer replacements for long-term planners |
Styling ideas
- Terrace-Glow – Line a narrow front path with LA PALOMA 85 ® underplanted with dwarf hostas for foliage contrast – ideal for city dwellers wanting calm elegance in tight spaces
- Snow-Ribbon – Create a low, white “ribbon” hedge along a front boundary, alternating the roses with compact lavender for scent and soft movement – perfect for homeowners seeking a neat yet romantic welcome
- Urban-Courtyard – Plant three roses in a triangular group in a gravel-mulched bed with Sempervivum to echo park-style bedding – suited to those who like structured, low, easily read plantings
- Container-Promenade – Use a single rose in a 50-litre pot flanked by Nepeta and sage in smaller containers to soften hard standing – a good choice for balcony and patio owners with limited soil
- Green-Gallery – Mix LA PALOMA 85 ® with Phormium ‘Tom Thumb’ and small ornamental grasses in a slim border to showcase white against strong foliage – appealing to design-led gardeners after year-round structure
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
LA PALOMA 85 ® (TANamola) is a floribunda bedding rose from the shrub group, marketed as a compact bed rose for garden use and recognised by the ARS name La Paloma 85. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Hans Jürgen Evers at Rosen Tantau, Germany, and introduced in 1985, this cultivar reflects classic mid-1980s floribunda breeding aimed at uniform bedding and compact shrub performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright and compact, typically 50–70 cm tall and 40–60 cm wide, with dense, dark-green glossy foliage and moderate prickliness, well suited to bedding schemes and low hedging in small gardens. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, cupped flowers with 26–39 petals are borne in clusters of three to five per stem, remonting reliably to give an abundant second flush after the main flowering period. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Buds open from greenish cream-white to delicate lemon-tinged centres, finishing as bright, pure snow-white blooms; colour holds reasonably well in sun with little bleaching or colour shift through the season. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is delicate and understated, with a light rose character that is barely noticeable at a distance, making the variety more about visual effect and structure than strong scent. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip production is sparse due to the double flowers; when present, hips are small, spherical and orange-red, about 8–12 mm in diameter, adding only a discreet late-season accent. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately -21 to -18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3), but highly susceptible to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, requiring regular monitoring and disease management. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best used in beds, low hedging, parks and urban plantings; suitable for partial shade. Maintain generous spacing, ensure good air circulation, and follow a regular, preventative plant-health routine. |
LA PALOMA 85 ® offers compact structure, luminous white bedding display and long-term stability from its own-root form; consider it if you want a quietly reliable rose presence in your garden.