STELLA POLARE – white hybrid tea rose – Tantau
Step outside your London terrace door after rain and you can picture a narrow path edged with white blooms of STELLA POLARE, their fresh, subtle fragrance rising in cool air as you follow a glistening line of petals. This award-winning hybrid tea holds its colour with exceptional stability, so each high-centred flower stays immaculate from bud to fall, even in typically damp, changeable British weather. Grown on its own roots in our 2‑litre container, it offers reassuring long-term balance in a small family front garden, regenerating steadily from the base for a long-lived, reliable structure. In the first year it quietly builds roots, in the second the framework of shoots, and by the third year you enjoy its full ornamental impact, working calmly alongside good drainage to cope gracefully with heavy, rain-soaked urban clay.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front-garden focal point by the doorstep |
As a single specimen near your front door, STELLA POLARE’s tall, bushy habit and classic high-centred flowers draw the eye without overwhelming a small space. Its moderate maintenance needs suit time-pressed homeowners. |
| Formal hybrid tea border in a family garden |
Planted at the recommended spacing in a row or low hedge, its upright structure and consistent flower shape create a restrained, formal line that fits neatly alongside paths in average-sized gardens for aspiring beginners. |
| Cut-flower row for home arrangements |
The long, straight stems and exhibition-quality buds are ideal for cutting, so a short back-garden row will supply elegant, snow-white blooms for vases, adding value for creative hobby-gardeners. |
| Rainwater-aware front garden with improved drainage |
In heavier urban soils where rain tends to linger, the bushy yet not sprawling habit works well above a mulched, well-drained base, helping you combine decorative planting with better surface water management for thoughtful city-dwellers. |
| Mixed white-and-silver “girly” planting with perennials |
Pairing its luminous white flowers with lavender, nepeta or sage produces a soft, feminine look that feels romantic yet tidy in compact terraces, keeping the display stylish but manageable for design-conscious urbanites. |
| Large container on balcony or paved front area |
In a substantial 40–50 litre pot with peat-free compost, its bushy growth and modest width stay in proportion, providing height and classic blooms where there is no open soil, ideal for balcony-focused renters. |
| Long-term investment planting in a family garden |
As an own-root rose, STELLA POLARE matures steadily, building a stable framework that can be rejuvenated from the base after pruning, making it a sound, long-lived choice for planning-ahead families. |
| Weather-resilient accent in coastal or exposed sites |
The robust foliage and moderate disease resistance help it cope with breezier, damp conditions where other roses may struggle, supporting reliable flowering in less-sheltered gardens for coastal-region residents. |
Styling ideas
- Terrace-Showpiece – Place a single plant in a square 50 l container by the front step, underplanted with low thyme to soften edges – ideal for image-conscious city-dwellers.
- Bridal-Border – Combine in a short front-garden border with lavender and nepeta for a white-and-lilac, dress-like softness – perfect for romantically minded beginners.
- Moonlit-Row – Plant a neat line along a path where white blooms catch evening light, with grey gravel for clean contrast – suited to busy professionals wanting low visual clutter.
- Calm-Companion – Thread STELLA POLARE between clumps of Iris germanica and Echinacea for a composed, nature-inspired look – good for families seeking a gentle, modern cottage feel.
- Balcony-Gallery – Use one or two large containers against a dark fence so the flowers appear almost luminous – appealing to renters turning a small balcony into a simple outdoor gallery.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose; registered as TANlarpost, marketed as STELLA POLARE and Polarstern. Exhibition hybrid tea for garden and cutting, with authentic, verified cultivar identity for consistent planting. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Mathias Tantau Jr. (Rosen Tantau, Germany), registered 1982 and introduced in the United Kingdom by Wheatcroft Brothers Ltd. in 1984, now a well-established, trusted garden classic. |
| Awards and recognition |
Rose of the Year, RNRS (United Kingdom, 1985) with accompanying Certificate of Merit, plus several regional American Rose Society awards between 1998 and 2012 confirming enduring exhibition value. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy hybrid tea, around 85–120 cm tall and 70–95 cm wide, with moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickliness; maintains a tidy outline in well-spaced plantings. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, high-centred blooms with 26–39 petals, typically borne singly on strong stems. Classic pointed buds open slowly, holding their form well for both garden display and cutting into vases. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Immaculate, stable white flowers, ARS white and RHS 155C–155D. Buds open greenish-ivory, quickly whitening; colour holds excellently with only a faint creamy tone at the base and minimal visible fading. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fresh, lively scent with mild to moderate intensity, noticeable at close range without being overpowering. Best appreciated on still, damp mornings or evenings along a path or near frequently used doors. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip formation is usually low because of the double flower form; where present, expect small, egg-shaped hips about 10–14 mm across, colouring orange-red and offering a discreet late-season accent. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −32 to −29 °C (USDA 4b, RHS H7, Swedish Zone 5). Good black-spot resistance with moderate susceptibility to mildew and rust; appreciates regular watering during warm, dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; plant 50–90 cm apart depending on use. Medium maintenance: deadhead, prune annually, and monitor for disease; performs well in large containers. |
STELLA POLARE Hybrid tea rose TANlarpost offers long-lasting white blooms, reliable garden structure and steady own-root longevity; a thoughtful option if you favour calm elegance over complexity.