BARON GIROD DE L'AIN – red historical perpetual hybrid rose - Reverchon
Imagine afternoon tea beneath an arbour, the air filled with a fragrance so lush it feels like stepping into a Victorian garden, while deeply coloured blooms stand out even in typical British weather with its shifting showers and breezes. BARON GIROD DE L'AIN brings a romantic, cottage mood to family gardens, combining a bushy, well-shaped habit with reliable repeat flowering through the season. Its velvety carmine-red petals finely traced in white lend a distinctive character to mixed borders and specimen plantings, especially where you want that “storybook” feel with herbs and perennials. As an own-root shrub, it offers reassuring longevity, quietly rebuilding from its base after harder winters or pruning, and keeping its ornamental value stable from year to year, following the natural rhythm of year one for rooting, year two for structure, and year three for full garden impact.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Feature shrub near seating or terrace |
Very strong, old-rose scent and large, velvety blooms make this an excellent choice beside a bench or patio, where you can enjoy its perfume on still evenings without needing complicated care routines, ideal for the busy urban gardener. |
| Cottage-style flowerbed with perennials |
The bushy, moderately tall structure and repeat flowering fit perfectly into a cottage-style border mixed with catmint, sage and light perennials, giving gentle height and colour without fussy pruning, ideal for the romantic cottage gardener. |
| Historical or traditional front garden |
As a genuine nineteenth-century Hybrid Perpetual with distinctive white-edged petals, this rose anchors a traditional scheme with authentic period charm while remaining easy to keep in shape with simple annual trimming, ideal for the lover of heritage. |
| Low-maintenance family flowerbed |
Good resistance to black spot, mildew and rust means fewer sprays and less worry in damp British seasons, so it stays presentable with basic deadheading and watering, ideal for the time-pressed homeowner. |
| Informal flowering hedge or boundary strip |
Planted at the recommended distances, its bushy habit and medium height create a soft, romantic screen that flowers repeatedly, giving structure and privacy without demanding intricate formative pruning, ideal for the family garden planner. |
| Cutting corner for scented blooms |
Large, double, long-stemmed flowers in a rich carmine-red are excellent for cutting, bringing fragrance and period character indoors while the shrub continues to bloom again from summer into autumn, ideal for the home flower arranger. |
| Cool, moisture-retentive borders |
This variety dislikes extreme heat and drought but performs reliably where soils stay evenly moist and summers are mild, matching many UK conditions with regular rainfall and heavier ground, ideal for the clay-soil gardener. |
| Large container on terrace or courtyard |
In a minimum 40–50 litre container with good drainage, its upright, bushy form and repeating, scented blooms offer a movable focal point that can be placed where you sit and entertain, ideal for the small-space gardener. |
Styling ideas
- Victorian Archway – Pair BARON GIROD DE L'AIN near a simple metal arch with catmint at its feet, letting perfume and rich red tones frame a path – for homeowners wanting a nostalgic entrance.
- Kitchen-Border Mix – Combine with common sage, chives and soft pinks along a vegetable plot edge to weave scent and history into a productive garden – for rural cooks who enjoy cutting herbs and flowers together.
- Evening Seating Nook – Plant two or three shrubs by a small patio with pale verbena and white annuals so their strong fragrance and deep colour glow at dusk – for couples creating a cosy retreat.
- Heritage Frontage – Use as a key shrub among clipped box or low hedging to give a classic frontage that looks established quickly yet needs only light yearly pruning – for period-property and village-street settings.
- Container Courtyard – Grow one plant in a generous terracotta pot, underplant with trailing thyme and soft grasses to bring movement and scent to paving – for balcony and courtyard gardeners with limited borders.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
BARON GIROD DE L'AIN, historical Hybrid Perpetual; trade names include Baron Girod de l'Ain and Reverchon; unregistered cultivar used mainly in heritage and collector gardens. |
| Origin and breeding |
Sport of ‘Eugène Fürst’, raised by Reverchon nursery in France; bred around 1875 and introduced in 1897, representing classic late nineteenth-century French Hybrid Perpetual breeding. |
| Awards and recognition |
Received a Large Silver Medal from the Association Horticole Lyonnaise in 1897, and later multiple Victorian Award show prizes from the American Rose Society between 1998 and 2012. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub reaching about 100–150 cm in height and 90–140 cm spread, with moderately dense, matt light-green foliage and moderate prickliness; self-cleaning is weak so spent blooms benefit from deadheading. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, cup-shaped blooms with 26–39 petals, usually borne solitary on stems; repeat-flowering with a generous main flush followed by further blooms later in the season under normal garden care. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep carmine-red flowers with irregular narrow white edging; colour holds best in cooler conditions, fading somewhat in strong sun to raspberry red while the pale edge may take on a light pink tinge. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very strong, garden-filling scent with a full-bodied old-rose character; best appreciated near seating areas and paths where warm, still air can carry the perfume for evening and weekend enjoyment. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms small numbers of ovoid hips around 12–18 mm across, coloured orange-red when ripe; hips may remain decorative into autumn but are usually secondary to the long flowering display. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Shows good resistance to common fungal diseases including black spot, powdery mildew and rust; hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA Zone 5b), but needs regular watering in hot, dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with moisture-retentive but well-drained soil; plant around 100–110 cm apart for hedging or groups; prefers cooler, not drought-prone sites and benefits from routine deadheading to extend flowering. |
BARON GIROD DE L'AIN offers richly scented, repeat-flowering carmine-red blooms on a bushy, disease-resilient shrub whose own-root form promises dependable longevity in a family garden, making it a thoughtful choice for your next planting.