HEILIGE BILHILDIS – red bedding floribunda rose - Márk
Imagine stepping onto a sunny coastal veranda, sheltered from brisk onshore winds yet open to the light, and finding your rose bed alive with small, vivid scarlet blooms all summer. HEILIGE BILHILDIS is an easy-going bedding floribunda that suits today’s busy, space-conscious household, needing only straightforward care to put on a long-season display. Its own-root nature gives reassuring longevity, recovering well after pruning or rough weather, and helping the plant look evenly furnished from base to tip over the years. In a typical family garden on heavier soil, it settles reliably with simple preparation that gently improves drainage and anchoring so coastal breezes are less of a concern. You can expect a steady rhythm of flowering clusters, each single bloom cleaning itself so you are not constantly deadheading. The bright, open flowers are a magnet for bees, adding a subtle sense of life and movement around seating areas and children’s play corners. In a large pot of at least 40–50 litres it creates a compact, bushy structure that frames a doorway or balcony without overwhelming it. Over time, it matures from establishing roots in year one, through stronger top growth in year two, to full ornamental presence by year three, rewarding you with uncomplicated colour, quiet coastal charm and a relaxed, seaside-terrace mood.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small coastal front garden bed |
The compact, bushy habit and moderate height make this rose ideal for contained front gardens where space is tight but you still want impact from the pavement. Vivid scarlet clusters read clearly even against shingle, gravel or pale render, and its own-root build supports dependable longevity with simple seasonal care, suiting beginners. |
| Wind-exposed but sheltered-by-house border |
Placed in a border that is partly shielded by walls or fencing, the dense foliage and well-anchoring root system help the shrub stand up to blustery, moisture-laden coastal weather while retaining its ornamental shape and flowering. This calm reliability suits busy-owners. |
| Large container on veranda or balcony |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container, HEILIGE BILHILDIS forms a rounded, evenly clothed shrub that flowers freely without outgrowing its space, making it easy to manage around outdoor seating. Own-root stability and self-cleaning flowers keep maintenance low, particularly valued by flat-dwellers. |
| Family seating area or tea corner |
The long-season flowering with minimal deadheading lets you enjoy repeated colour while you sit outside, without regular grooming. The lightly spicy but very discreet fragrance will not overpower a small seating area, adding gentle atmosphere that appeals to tea-lovers. |
| Pollinator-friendly strip by path or drive |
The single, open flowers with exposed yellow stamens provide easy access for bees and other pollinators, giving a lively, ecological edge along paths and driveways. Regular repeat flowering extends this support well into late season, an attractive feature for wildlife-minded. |
| Low, colourful hedge beside lawn |
Planted at closer spacing, the bushy growth and moderate height combine into a neat, low hedge with bright scarlet flowers against mid-green foliage. Own-root durability and straightforward pruning make it practical where children play nearby, reassuring for families. |
| Mixed coastal-style bed with perennials and grasses |
Its stable scarlet colour, good heat tolerance and moderate drought resilience work well among silver foliage, ornamental grasses and perennials, echoing a sunlit, maritime palette while coping with breezy, shifting weather conditions common in coastal counties, pleasing stylists. |
| Urban front garden with limited maintenance time |
Self-cleaning single flowers and moderate disease resistance mean fewer hours spent clipping off old blooms or managing minor issues; with basic watering and feeding it keeps a tidy, colourful presence from its own-root framework, matching the routine of time-poor. |
Styling ideas
- Seaside-bed – Combine with blue-grey Festuca and sea kale for a loose, shore-inspired strip by a path – ideal for coastal-style enthusiasts.
- Veranda-pot – Plant one rose in a 50-litre terracotta container, underplant with Nepeta for a soft, spilling edge – suitable for balcony and veranda owners.
- Family-border – Mass plant along a lawn with Lonicera nitida ‘Maigrün’ at the front for year-round structure – good for households wanting simple order.
- Pollinator-lane – Thread through Delphinium clumps and low catmint to create a bee-friendly corridor beside a garden path – appealing to wildlife-conscious gardeners.
- Urban-frame – Flank a front door with two large pots of this rose, letting its steady, compact form frame the entrance – perfect for city homeowners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
HEILIGE BILHILDIS is a bedding floribunda shrub rose from the Bed rose group, marketed as a versatile garden and landscape plant; breeder code or registered cultivar name are not recorded. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in Hungary around 2000 by Márk Gergely, with parentage not documented; introduced to the wider market via PharmaRosa® Ltd., with formal registration year not specified in available sources. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Forms a bushy shrub about 80–110 cm high and 60–90 cm wide, with dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickliness, giving a compact, well-filled look suitable for beds, borders and low hedges. |
| Flower morphology |
Bears medium-sized, flat, single flowers with 5–12 petals, carried in clusters; repeat flowering is good, with a notably abundant second flush that maintains decorative value across the main garden season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Flowers are vivid, pure scarlet red (RHS 46A) with a silky sheen and pronounced yellow stamens; colour retention is very good, with only slight marginal darkening and minimal fading through to petal drop. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very light and delicately spicy, generally only noticed at close quarters; this makes the variety suitable where strong scent is not desired around seating, doors or frequently opened windows. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces bright red, globose hips about 6–10 mm in diameter in moderate quantities, adding discrete late-season interest without significantly reducing the overall flowering display earlier in the year. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish Zone 4) with moderate resistance to common foliar diseases; heat and moderate drought tolerance are rated good under normal garden management. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with reasonable soil preparation and spacing around 50–60 cm in beds; suitable for mass planting, hedging or high-stem training, with medium maintenance and occasional pest or disease control. |
HEILIGE BILHILDIS offers long-season scarlet colour, compact bed-friendly growth and pollinator appeal on a durable own-root framework; a thoughtful choice if you seek lasting effect from straightforward care.