BOULE DE NEIGE – white historic noisette rose - Lacharme
Settle into an afternoon of quiet romance with ‘Boule de Neige’, a Victorian-era noisette rose whose fully double, snow-white blooms and full-bodied perfume bring storybook charm to compact family gardens. This own-root plant offers reassuring longevity and steady regrowth, so even if you are new to roses it matures into a reliable vertical accent for arbours, pillars or a cottage-style hedge with minimal fuss. In coastal or breezier spots it remains reassuringly stable and well-anchored, coping gracefully with wind and changeable weather. Over time its dense dark foliage and upright habit give a sense of green structure, while the nostalgic white rosettes repeat through summer for enduring visual impact. From a settled first season to a more substantial framework and, by the third year, its full old-rose presence, this cultivar grows naturally into your garden rhythm.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Cottage-style flower bed near the terrace |
Ideal where you want classic white rosettes and a romantic feel without expert-level care: moderate maintenance, repeat flowering and own-root resilience combine for dependable beauty close to everyday seating for beginners. |
| Victorian or period-themed feature bed |
This 1867 Lacharme variety anchors historical schemes, its authentic form and snowy blooms delivering genuine period character while remaining robust and long-lived, so you can invest once and enjoy it across decades as a collector. |
| Perfumed pillar or light arbour support |
The upright habit and medium height make it excellent for training onto a pillar or narrow arch, where repeat-flowering rosettes and a powerful, garden-filling perfume create that afternoon-tea atmosphere sought by the romantic homeowner. |
| Low, traditional flowering hedge |
Planted at hedge spacing, its dense foliage, moderate prickliness and recurring white flushes create a soft boundary that feels secure yet inviting, suiting family plots that favour a classic, lived-in look for the traditionalist gardener. |
| Large container on a sunny patio |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container, this own-root rose builds a stable framework and can be pruned flexibly, offering strong fragrance and cottage character even in paved urban spaces, especially valued by space-conscious town-dwellers. |
| Mixed border in heavier garden soils |
Once established, its own-root system copes steadily where heavier soils need thought-out drainage or raised beds, giving reliable vertical structure and long-term presence to mixed borders for the practical-minded planner. |
| Family seating area with evening use |
The very strong, lingering scent and luminous white rosettes read beautifully in low light, so a plant or two near benches or dining spots offers a cosy, storybook atmosphere on still evenings enjoyed by the sociable family. |
| Kitchen-garden edge or path lining |
Along paths or vegetable plots it adds upright form and clean white colour without shading excessively, and its own-root durability means it tolerates routine pruning adjustments and light traffic from the busy cook-gardener. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Pillar – Train ‘Boule de Neige’ up a slim wooden or metal pillar, underplant with Geranium sanguineum for a soft pink carpet – ideal for lovers of classic cottage entrances.
- White Hedge – Create a low, billowing hedge along a front boundary, alternating with evergreen candytuft to keep structure in winter – suited to homeowners wanting tidy but romantic frontage.
- Victorian Corner – Combine this historic rose with brick edging, lavender and old terracotta pots for an authentic period corner – perfect for those restoring or echoing Victorian gardens.
- Patio Accent – Grow one plant in a 50-litre terracotta container with trailing thyme at the rim, placing it by a bench for evening fragrance – best for small-plot or balcony-focused gardeners.
- Kitchen Walkway – Line the path to a kitchen garden with spaced specimens, backed by cherry laurel, for a green wall punctuated by scented white blooms – appealing to keen home cooks and growers.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Historic noisette rose, commercial name BOULE DE NEIGE – white historic noisette rose - Lacharme; ARS exhibition name ‘Boule de Neige’; unregistered cultivar with verified authenticity. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by François Lacharme in France, 1867; parentage ‘Mademoiselle Blanche Lafitte’ × ‘Sappho’; originally distributed by Lacharme; part of the historical noisette and Bourbon rose tradition. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised in American Rose Society Victorian classes, with wins at the National Rose Show 1999 and multiple US rose society events around 2000–2001 for historical display quality. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright shrub reaching about 130–200 cm tall and 100–170 cm wide, with dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate thorns; forms a well-filled framework suitable for hedges, beds and light supports. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, rosette-shaped blooms, typically medium-sized at roughly 4–7 cm, produced mainly solitary on stems; repeat-flowering with an abundant second flush, though spent blooms may need manual removal. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure snow-white flowers with a silky sheen; buds milky white, opening to creamy-edged blooms that settle into uniform white; colour holds excellently with only slight ivory tinges in prolonged opening. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very strong, long-lasting old-rose fragrance of full-bodied character, capable of scenting nearby seating areas; ideal where perfume is a priority in traditional or romantic garden designs. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rosehips form only sparsely due to the dense petal count, but may appear as small spherical orange-red hips around 12–18 mm, adding occasional late-season interest without seeding concerns. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zone 4, USDA 5b); medium general disease resistance, relatively good against black spot, moderate for mildew and rust; appreciates irrigation in extended drought. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions with well-drained soil; suitable for beds, hedges, specimens, pillars and large containers; moderate maintenance including occasional pest control, deadheading and structural pruning as required. |
BOULE DE NEIGE offers romantic white blooms, powerful fragrance and dependable structure on its own roots, maturing into a long-lived cottage-garden feature you can confidently choose for everyday family spaces.