|  | 
	  | 
'Alba Meidiland ™' rose Description 
  
  
  
  Photo courtesy of LAFITE
HMF Ratings: 
100 favorite votes.  Average rating: 
EXCELLENT.
 
ARS: White, near white or white blend Shrub.Registration name: MEIflopan 
Bloom: White.  None / no fragrance.  50 to 55 petals.  Average diameter 1.5".  Small, very full (41+ petals), cluster-flowered, in small clusters, in large clusters bloom form.  Prolific, continuous (perpetual) bloom throughout the season.   
Habit: Medium, spreading.  Medium, glossy, dark green, dense foliage.  
 Height: 2' to 5' (60 to 150cm).  Width: 4' to 7' (120 to 215cm).
 
Growing: USDA zone 4b through 9b.  Can be used for beds and borders, cut flower, garden or ground cover.  Vigorous.  flowers drop off cleanly.  shade tolerant.  Disease susceptibility: very disease resistant.   
Patents: Australia - Application No: 1991/076  on  21 Aug 1991   VIEW PBR PATENT Synonym: Alba Meidiland. Applicant: Meilland International. Patent has Expired   United States - Patent No: PP 6,891  on  4 Jul 1989   VIEW USPTO PATENT Application  on  28 Apr 1988 'Meifloplan' Bred by Marie-Louise Meilland, Rosa sempervirens X  Marthe Carron.  Patent has expired 
Notes: Wayside Gardens says Alba Meidiland  is a great improvement over 'White Meidiland' because it self-cleans its old blooms... An anonymous testimonial: About ten years ago I bought an 'Alba Meidiland' as a ground cover rose.  It has, at times, completely blanketed a neighbor's mature Mock Orange and Vitex, with thousands of blooms.  After a severe storm, I cut the entire area back and discovered the 'Alba' had self-rooted in numerous areas.  I gave away most of the new plants--all as sturdy and floriferous as their parent--and have attempted to keep the remaining plants closer to the ground where, theoretically, they belong.  It's a losing battle, I'm afraid, for although they continue to bloom reliably and freely, they appear to want nothing more than to blanket the tops of everything around.  Beautiful, yes; reliable, certainly; healthy, definitely; vigorous, an understatement!
 One of the Roses that "passed the test" in Longwood Garden's Ten-Year Rose Trials. |