BUISMAN'S GLORY – pink bedding floribunda rose - Buisman
Picture a sheltered coastal veranda, a pot of colour at your feet and a hedge of shimmering blooms gently softening the wind, while you enjoy tea after a walk on the shingle. Buisman’s Glory is bred for easy-going gardens, forming a bushy, low-maintenance hedge that thrives where good drainage helps it cope with persistent coastal weather and exposed family plots. Its single, cyclamen-pink flowers with a bright white centre open repeatedly from early summer, dropping spent petals cleanly so there is little to tidy, and its own-root nature gives reassuring longevity as it settles in gradually and rewards you with increasing ornamental value from year to year.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front-of-border coastal bedding |
Compact, bushy growth to around 75–105 cm makes this rose ideal for the front of mixed borders in breezier coastal gardens, where its low maintenance and good disease resistance keep it presentable with minimal effort for time-pressed coastal homeowners and beginners. |
| Low flowering hedge along a veranda |
Planted at 35–45 cm spacing, the dense framework and steady repeat flowering create a soft, semi-formal hedge that offers visual shelter without blocking sea views, perfect for edging a veranda or path used daily by busy family gardeners and homeowners. |
| Mass planting in small family gardens |
The recommended planting density of roughly five plants per square metre allows you to build bold drifts of colour that look professionally designed yet are easy to look after, suiting those who want strong impact from straightforward planting and care. |
| Large patio containers and coastal pots |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container with free-draining compost, its bushy habit and self-cleaning flowers give months of uncomplicated colour on terraces and small patios, ideal for compact coastal living spaces and urbanites. |
| Pollinator-friendly family play areas |
The simple, open flowers with exposed golden stamens attract bees reliably, adding movement and ecological value near lawns and seating, giving families with children a gentle way to support wildlife as part of everyday garden use and relaxation. |
| Low-intervention public or shared spaces |
Strong resistance to black spot, mildew and rust means less spraying and fewer issues in communal beds or front gardens, even where maintenance visits are infrequent, making it a dependable choice for shared schemes and hands-off gardeners. |
| Coastal-style mixes with grasses and perennials |
Its vivid magenta-pink, white-centred blooms punctuate clumps of sea-holly-like textures, Festuca and Lavandula, while a well-drained site helps the roots cope with repeated wet and windy spells typical of many UK coastal plots for style-conscious seaside owners. |
| Long-term, own-root planting schemes |
As an own-root rose it forms a stable, regenerating framework that settles in during year one, builds top growth in year two and then delivers its full ornamental show in year three, rewarding patient planting plans and forward-thinking planners. |
Styling ideas
- Shell-path edging – Line a shingle or gravel path with repeating groups of Buisman’s Glory for a low hedge of pink, bee-friendly flowers – ideal for relaxed coastal-family garden owners.
- Veranda trio – Plant three roses in separate 50-litre tubs, underplanted with sea kale or Festuca, to frame a sunny seating area – perfect for small-space patio dwellers.
- Raspberry drift – Create a massed bed of Buisman’s Glory backed by Lavandula for a hazy, seaside colour wash – suited to beginners who want strong impact with little fuss.
- Play-corner wildlife strip – Mix the rose with Coreopsis and garden cranesbills near a lawn to provide nectar and colour within easy sight of children – good for nature-curious families.
- Cottage-coastal blend – Combine with calamint and ornamental grasses along a fence for a soft, breezy screen that still feels traditional – appealing to homeowners updating older gardens.
Technical cultivar profile
| Trait | Data |
| Name and registration |
BUISMAN'S GLORY is a floribunda bedding rose also known as Buisman’s Glory, used mainly as a bed rose in borders or mass plantings; it is an unregistered exhibition floribunda of standard consumer quality. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in the Netherlands in 1952 by G. A. H. Buisman, from the cross ‘Karen Poulsen’ × ‘Sangerhausen’, and historically associated with the breeding firm G. A. H. Buisman & Zonen specialising in robust garden roses. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, moderately dense shrub reaching about 75–105 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, with light green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a neat, low-maintenance structure suitable for beds, hedges and containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Produces medium-sized, flat, single flowers with roughly 5–12 petals, freely borne in clusters, with good self-cleaning as spent blooms mostly drop away naturally; remontant habit ensures abundant second flushes through the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vivid magenta to cyclamen-pink (RHS 53A–53B) with a pale, expanding white centre and golden stamens; colour softens to raspberry-pink as blooms age, giving a lively, ever-changing display across repeated flowering waves. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Displays a very light, classically rose-like scent that is noticeable only at close quarters, so it provides visual impact without overwhelming fragrance, suiting seating areas and smaller patios where subtlety is preferred. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms moderate numbers of small, spherical red hips about 7–11 mm across, adding a discreet seasonal accent in late season and providing additional interest and potential food value for birds in informal plantings. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Shows good resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, reducing chemical inputs; hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3), suitable for most UK conditions including exposed but well-drained sites. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with well-drained soil; plant 35–70 cm apart depending on use, at roughly five plants per m² for bedding. Low maintenance with minimal pruning required, making it particularly suitable for easy-care family gardens. |
BUISMAN'S GLORY offers easy-care repeat flowering, reliable disease resistance and long-lived own-root strength, making it a thoughtful choice for relaxed coastal-style gardens and low-maintenance family borders.