CHAMPAGNE CELEBRATION™ – cream-yellow hybrid tea rose
Planted in a sunny corner or near your seating area, Champagne Celebration settles quickly as an own‑root shrub, giving you lasting, romantic colour without demanding complicated care. Its bushy, upright habit fits easily into typical UK family gardens, where good structure matters as much as bloom. The pastel cream‑yellow flowers open in classic, high‑centred form that suits both borders and vases, while the medium, fruity fragrance adds a gentle, elegant note around your terrace. Developed on its own roots, the plant matures into a reliably long‑lived feature that can regenerate well after pruning or weather setbacks. In normal seasons the remontant flowering pattern gives you repeat flushes from early summer into autumn, supporting the feeling of slow, cosy afternoons outdoors. With dense, dark green foliage and moderate prickliness, the shrub anchors well even where breezes and showers are frequent near the coast, as long as the soil drains sensibly. Over time this creates a quietly romantic presence that suits cottage‑style paths and kitchen‑garden edges.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Main feature in a small family flowerbed |
The compact, bushy, upright habit stays in proportion with modest borders, while still giving a clear focal point. Regular repeat flowering keeps colour in view from the house and patio, with only light pruning and deadheading needed for busy homeowners. |
| Cut‑flower corner for home arrangements |
High‑centred, pointed buds and medium, exhibition‑style blooms sit on straight stems ideal for cutting. The soft cream‑champagne colouring blends effortlessly with other garden flowers for jugs and vases, bringing a classic look to tables for home arrangers. |
| Romantic cottage‑style mixed border |
Pastel cream‑yellow flowers and dark glossy foliage lend themselves to storybook cottage pairings with catmint, hardy geraniums or foxgloves. Repeat flowering maintains a gentle, romantic feel along paths and seating areas suited to cottage‑garden lovers. |
| Sunny terrace container, large pot or half‑barrel |
The upright, contained framework adapts well to a substantial container of at least 40–50 litres, provided drainage is good and watering is regular in warm spells. This lets you enjoy fragrance and colour close to doors and seating, perfect for urban gardeners. |
| Long‑term structural planting in a family garden |
As an own‑root rose, the shrub builds a durable framework that can recover from accidental damage or hard pruning, supporting a long garden life. Expect a steady progression from root establishment to fuller top growth and then a mature, ornamental presence for long‑term planners. |
| Low, traditional rose hedge or edging line |
The bushy growth and 70–95 cm height make an orderly, low hedge along paths or to frame a kitchen garden. Regular spacing gives a neat line of foliage and blooms that reads clearly from a distance, suiting traditional‑style owners. |
| Warmer, exposed or occasionally dry spots |
Good heat and drought tolerance allows planting in sunnier, more exposed positions, as long as the soil is reasonably well prepared and you water in prolonged hot spells. This is reassuring where summers run dry for practical gardeners. |
| Low‑input, resilient planting in variable UK weather |
Medium disease resistance with reliable black‑spot tolerance and a strong, own‑root framework means the plant maintains its decorative value with modest care, even where rain and wind are frequent near the coast, provided the soil drains sensibly for time‑pressed beginners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Border Duo – Combine Champagne Celebration with soft blue catmint and dusky pink hardy geraniums for a hazy, cottage look that repeats flowering all summer – ideal for romantic cottage‑style enthusiasts.
- Pathway Hedge – Plant a low, evenly spaced line along a front path, underplanted with lavender for fragrance, to create a tidy yet welcoming boundary – suited to family homes wanting traditional kerb appeal.
- Terrace Centrepiece – Grow it in a 50‑litre half‑barrel with trailing thyme or creeping campanula to soften the rim and enjoy the scent close to seating – perfect for small urban patios.
- Cutting Patch Elegance – Group several plants in a sunny bed with white cosmos and green dill for a dedicated cutting area that produces vases of pastel, high‑centred blooms – for keen home florists.
- Kitchen‑Garden Frame – Use pairs of shrubs to mark the ends of vegetable beds, echoing old‑fashioned potager layouts while providing long‑lived, structural interest – attractive to gardeners who like orderly yet romantic plots.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose; registered as FRYlimbo, marketed as Champagne Celebration™ Hybrid tea rose FRYlimbo, an exhibition‑type garden rose suited to both beds and cutting. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Gareth Fryer of Fryer’s Nurseries Ltd, United Kingdom; parentage not publicly disclosed, introduced and registered in 2009 through Fryer’s Roses in the UK market. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub reaching about 70–95 cm in height and 50–70 cm in spread, with dense, dark green, glossy foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a compact, structural plant. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium sized, double, high‑centred blooms with 26–39 petals on mostly solitary stems, classic hybrid tea form suitable for cutting, with remontant repeat flowering giving plentiful second flushes. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Cream‑yellow to champagne‑peach tones, softer towards the petal centres; in strong sun may fade towards ivory or off‑white, maintaining a light pastel effect over the flowering period. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Clearly noticeable, medium strength scent with a fresh, fruity and slightly musky character, designed more for garden enjoyment and cutting than for intensive perfumery use. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasionally forms small, spherical, orange‑red hips about 10–14 mm across, which can add modest ornamental interest later in the season alongside any remaining blooms. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to around −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, roughly USDA 6b), with medium overall disease resistance including good black‑spot tolerance; needs standard care under high disease pressure. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny sites with well‑prepared soil; allow about 50–90 cm spacing depending on use, water in dry spells, and deadhead to encourage repeats for beds, mixed borders and cutting. |
Champagne Celebration™ Hybrid tea rose FRYlimbo offers romantic repeat flowering, compact structure and gentle fragrance on a durable own‑root shrub; a thoughtful choice if you would like long‑term, pastel elegance in your garden.