FIONA GELIN – peach-pink nostalgia rose - Massad
Under a simple arch or beside your kitchen-garden path, Fiona Gelin creates the romance of afternoon tea in a storybook setting, with deeply cupped, peach-pink blooms and a generous, complex perfume. Its shrub habit and dense, glossy foliage give dependable structure in an average family garden, even where coastal winds and rain are frequent, provided drainage is sensibly managed. As an own-root rose it offers reassuring longevity, quietly regenerating from its own base after hard pruning or minor setbacks, and maintaining stable ornamental value for many years. In a small or medium border you can rely on its remontant flowering rhythm to refresh the display from early summer onwards, with a particularly abundant second flush that softens hedges, fences and cottage-style beds. Easy to integrate among herbs, perennials and hedging, it suits busy gardeners who want impact without fuss and who appreciate a rose that settles in, makes itself at home and steadily gains in character season after season.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Feature shrub near a seating area |
The bushy, upright habit and medium height make it ideal beside a bench, terrace or arbour, where the strong, complex fragrance can be enjoyed at close quarters through the season. A romantic, peach-pink colour range suits cottage-style family spaces and relaxed entertaining areas for the homeowner. |
| Small to medium mixed border |
Its 70–95 cm spread and dense, dark green foliage allow it to slot easily into mixed borders without leaving gaps, while repeat flowering keeps colour going between perennials. The rounded shrub shape adds structure in winter and supports that “cottage garden” look for the busy-gardener. |
| Low informal hedge |
Planting at 50–60 cm intervals builds a soft, flowering hedge that separates lawn from kitchen garden or frames a path without feeling formal or stiff. The remontant flushes keep the hedge lively through summer, with enough height for privacy yet still in scale for the family-garden. |
| Own-root long-term planting in family beds |
As an own-root shrub it does not rely on a graft, so it ages steadily, can regenerate from the base after hard pruning and maintains its character over many years. This makes it a reassuring, low-risk investment for permanent beds, suiting those who prefer planting once for the long-term. |
| Raised beds and improved clay soils |
In typical British conditions with heavier soils, it performs reliably when given modest drainage improvements or raised beds, coping with wet spells and blustery weather once established. This suits gardens where you want dependable structure and bloom without constant intervention for the beginner. |
| Large containers on patios (40–50 litres+) |
Its compact yet full shrub habit works very well in substantial containers of at least 40–50 litres, where roots have space to develop and watering can be controlled. This is practical for paved yards, balconies and rented homes, offering a movable focal point for the urban-gardener. |
| Romantic cottage and kitchen-garden schemes |
The nostalgia-style, very full blooms and peach-pink to pastel palette blend easily with herbs, climbers and traditional hedging, helping to create a gentle “English countryside” mood. The soft colour shifts over time bring depth without clashing, perfect for the cottage-lover. |
| Cut flowers from the garden |
Large, very full, cup-shaped flowers on a bushy framework lend themselves to cutting for small jugs and vases indoors, extending enjoyment of the strong fragrance. The stems are suitable for informal arrangements that echo the garden’s mood, appealing to the home-stylist. |
Styling ideas
- Kitchen-border romance – Underplant with chives, sage and lavender for a soft-edged border that blurs the line between ornamental and productive spaces – ideal for cottage-garden cooks.
- Arbour companion – Plant at the feet of a simple wooden arch with a light clematis weaving above to enjoy peach-pink blooms at eye level – perfect for lovers of storybook entrances.
- Pastel hedge drift – Repeat along a low boundary with catmint and soft grasses for a hazy, pastel ribbon that moves gently in the breeze – suited to relaxed family gardeners.
- Patio focal pot – Grow one plant in a 50–60 litre terracotta or half-barrel container, with trailing thyme around the rim, to bring scent and colour to small terraces – good for urban homeowners.
- Evening tea corner – Group with white foxgloves and pale pink geraniums near a bistro set so the fragrance and soft colours frame late-afternoon tea – ideal for romantic traditionalists.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Shrub rose from the Générosa collection; registered as MASfigel, marketed as Fiona Gelin Générosa MASfigel; nostalgia-style, romantic garden rose with exhibition category shrub rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Dominique Massad for Roses Guillot, France; parentage not disclosed. Introduced and registered in 2006 after breeding work completed in 2005, reflecting classic French romantic rose breeding. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub rose reaching about 85–115 cm in height and 70–95 cm spread, with dense, dark green glossy foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a rounded, well-filled outline in beds or hedges. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, very full, cup-shaped blooms with more than 40 petals, usually in clusters. Repeat flowering with an abundant second flush ensures extended display from early summer onwards in suitable conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Peach-pink flowers with a delicate coppery hue; buds deeper than open blooms. Colour shifts from warm peach-pink to pastel pink with cream-toned edges, with stronger fading in warm summers and softer in cooler weather. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, complex scent clearly noticeable around the shrub, contributing significantly to its romantic appeal near seating areas or paths; primarily ornamental, with very double flowers enclosing the stamens. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose-hip formation generally minimal due to the very double blooms; occasional small hips up to around 5 mm in diameter may occur without affecting ornamental value or overall shrub performance. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately -21 to -18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3). Disease resistance rated medium for common rose diseases; benefits from good air circulation and periodic preventive care in humid seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; prefers regular watering in prolonged dry spells. Suited to beds, hedges, large containers and cutting, with medium maintenance needs including occasional deadheading and pruning. |
FIONA GELIN offers fragrant, repeat-flowering peach-pink blooms on a versatile shrub that thrives long term as an own-root rose, making it a thoughtful choice for those planning a gently romantic garden.