PUERTA DEL SOL – golden-yellow climbing rose - Delbard
On a breezy Cornish afternoon, Puerta del Sol draws the light onto your veranda with warm, golden-yellow blooms that seem made for tea after a walk on the beach. This dependable climber settles in steadily and, with minimal fuss, creates a vertical curtain of colour that copes calmly with brisk coastal winds and well-drained, heavier soils, helping it stand firm through unsettled weather. Its repeat-flowering nature brings a gently refreshing mood to family gardens, while the mild, sweet fragrance remains pleasantly subtle rather than overpowering. Dense, glossy foliage clothes the canes from low down, giving structure and privacy on pergolas, walls or balcony trellises. As an own-root rose it matures gracefully and can regenerate from its base, offering reassuring longevity without complex pruning, and you can expect a natural rhythm of strong roots in the first year, a framework of shoots in the second, and its full ornamental potential by the third.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda or balcony windbreak |
Trained on a sturdy trellis, Puerta del Sol forms a soft, leafy screen that tempers sea breezes while its golden flowers echo sun on water, particularly valuable where brisk onshore winds meet heavier, free-draining soils near the house; well suited to time-poor beginners |
| Pergola over a seating area |
The trailing habit and dense foliage allow you to roof a compact pergola with filtered shade and sunlit flowers, creating a sheltered nook for morning coffee or evening tea, with minimal pruning and only occasional health checks for relaxed homeowners |
| Climbing accent on a house wall |
Along a south or west-facing wall, its height range gives you an elegant golden column that lifts the eye without overwhelming smaller plots, rewarding basic tying-in and feeding with reliable structure and colour for busy families |
| Rose pillar or obelisk feature |
Wrapped around an obelisk or pillar, this variety builds a vertical exclamation point in beds or on gravel, the double blooms reading clearly from a distance and suiting gardeners who prefer simple training over complex shaping, ideal for casual gardeners |
| Cut flowers from the garden |
Long, elegant, hybrid tea-style blooms with firm stems translate naturally into vases, letting you bring its warm golden tones indoors several times a season without needing a dedicated cutting patch, attractive for style-conscious collectors |
| Small family garden backbone climber |
Its moderate spread and repeat flowering make it easy to assign one boundary or corner as the “rose wall”, giving long-season colour without demanding large borders, a reassuring strategy for space-limited urban owners |
| Part-shade side passage or alley |
In lighter shade where many roses sulk, Puerta del Sol still performs respectably, brightening narrow side passages with reflected golden light, rewarding basic feeding and watering rather than intensive care, suitable for practical householders |
| Long-term, low-fuss investment planting |
The own-root form builds resilience year by year, recovering well after hard winters or pruning mistakes and providing many seasons of steady flowering once established, matching those who want enduring structure with modest effort, especially long-view planners |
Styling ideas
- Harbour-Veranda Screen – Train Puerta del Sol along a balcony rail with sea kale and blue Festuca below, echoing coastal tones while creating a soft wind-filter for relaxed seaside tea – ideal for coastal-style lovers
- Golden Pergola Walkway – Cover a narrow pergola with this climber and underplant with lavender and Alchemilla mollis for a fragrant, low-care tunnel of gold and soft lime – perfect for busy family gardens
- Sunny Cottage Wall – Let it climb beside a front door, framed by Verbena bonariensis and Penstemon ‘Husker Red’ for height and contrast, giving an inviting entrance with little maintenance – suited to beginner homeowners
- Modern Obelisk Focus – Spiral stems up a tall steel obelisk in gravel with simple grasses, using its structured habit and glossy foliage to add vertical emphasis in contemporary spaces – great for urban terrace gardeners
- Tea-and-Roses Corner – Position a bistro set under a light pergola draped with Puerta del Sol, adding a large 50‑litre container specimen nearby for extra bloom density – perfect for compact patios and verandas
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic | Data |
| Name and registration |
Climbing rose Puerta del Sol (registered as DELglap), exhibition hybrid tea-type climber; commercial name Puerta del Sol Climbing rose DELglap; premium gold graded, own-root in 2-litre containers. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Georges Delbard, Roseraies Georges Delbard, France; parentage combines ‘Queen Elizabeth’ × ‘Provence’ and ‘Michèle Meilland’ × ‘Bayadère’; selected and registered in 1971, introduced via Delbard. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Large-flowered climber with trailing habit, typically 200–340 cm high and 80–150 cm spread; moderately thorny, with dense, dark green, glossy foliage providing good coverage on walls, pergolas and pillars. |
| Flower morphology |
Double, hybrid tea-style blooms with 26–39 petals and large 7–10 cm diameter flowers; mainly solitary on stems, cup-shaped, producing a strong first flush followed by particularly good, abundant repeat flowering. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Warm, sunlit golden-yellow flowers; buds light golden yellow, opening rich and vivid, then lightening to creamy pale yellow in strong sun; moderate colour retention with attractive softening rather than abrupt fading. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Softly sweet scent of mild to moderate strength, noticeable at close range without dominating nearby seating areas; fragrance complements its visual impact, suiting spaces where a gentle, unobtrusive perfume is preferred. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose hips form only occasionally due to the double flowers; when present they are small, ovoid, 10–14 mm in diameter, orange-red and discreet, adding limited late-season interest without significant self-seeding. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately –18 to –21 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3, USDA 6b); disease profile shows resistance to black spot with moderate susceptibility to powdery mildew and rust, requiring only periodic monitoring and care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best on well-drained ground or in 40–50 litre containers with support; plant 140–240 cm apart depending on use; suitable for partial shade, medium maintenance with simple pruning and basic pest and disease management. |
Puerta del Sol Climbing rose DELglap offers repeat golden flowering, useful height in small gardens and dependable long-term structure from its own-root form, making it a thoughtful choice for your next vertical planting.