REINE LUCIA – lemon-yellow climbing rose - Kordes
Let Reine Lucia bring a soft coastal brightness to your garden, echoing the feeling of tea on a breezy veranda after collecting seashells. This own-root, lemon-yellow climber is ideal for small to medium family gardens where you want reliable colour without complex routines, and where careful siting and drainage help it cope with brisk showers and prevailing winds in exposed plots. Its medium-height, upright habit makes it easy to guide along a modest pergola, veranda posts or a sunny house wall, so you enjoy scented flowers at eye level. Semi-double, bee-attracting blooms appear in generous flushes, while the robust root system supports a long-lived plant that can regenerate and settle in for years. Planted in a 40–50 litre container or directly into the ground, you can expect a natural rhythm of steady root-building in the first year, vigorous shoots in the second, and full ornamental value from the third as this dependable climber becomes a golden focal point for relaxed family gatherings and coastal-style verandas.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Small family veranda or balcony (Cornwall/Devon style) |
Trained into a 40–50 litre pot with a slim obelisk or railing, this medium-height climber suits compact verandas, bringing long-season lemon-yellow colour without taking over the space, ideal for relaxed coastal-style beginners. |
| Sunny house wall in an average-sized garden |
Its 150–240 cm height and upright habit work perfectly on a modest south or west-facing wall, creating a gently scented backdrop that does not overwhelm nearby windows, well suited to busy homeowners. |
| Wind-sheltered seating corner |
Used as a vertical accent behind a bench or bistro set, it helps define a calm nook where you can enjoy its fragrance while the structure gives a sense of enclosure, appealing to those who want easy atmosphere with little fuss. |
| Coastal-style shingle or gravel planting |
Planted with good drainage into shingle or gravel, it links beautifully with silvery grasses and sea-inspired perennials, creating a light, beachy feel for hobby gardeners aiming for an informal seaside look. |
| Mixed border with bluish ornamental grasses |
The vivid lemon-yellow blooms contrast elegantly with blue-toned grasses such as Carex and Festuca, adding structure and colour through the season in a narrow bed, attractive for design-conscious but time-poor garden owners. |
| Bee-friendly family border |
Semi-double flowers with exposed stamens offer easy access for pollinators, so a simple training frame gives both vertical colour and a useful nectar stop, encouraging wildlife-minded families who still want classic roses. |
| Feature arch or small pergola near the back door |
Its manageable spread and height make it suitable for a modest arch, providing a welcoming, scented passage on everyday routes without demanding complex pruning, ideal for newcomers to climbing roses. |
| Clay-based garden with improved drainage |
In heavier UK soils, a raised planting area with added grit supports root health and helps it handle wet, breezy spells common in coastal regions, reassuring cautious gardeners seeking a dependable long-term choice. |
Styling ideas
- Seashell Veranda Screen – Train Reine Lucia along slim wires by a veranda rail, underplanted with lavender in containers, for a calm lemon-and-lilac screen – for coastal-style veranda owners.
- Lemon Drift Arch – Guide stems over a compact metal arch with Festuca and sea kale at the base, echoing dune colours – for small family gardens wanting a soft entrance feature.
- Harbour Gravel Border – Combine with Carex flacca ‘Blue Zinger’ and low calamint in a gravel strip, letting yellow blooms float above blue-green foliage – for busy homeowners who like minimalist upkeep.
- Breakfast Wall Corner – Position near a sunlit wall table, adding a simple trellis so flowers sit at eye and nose level – for those who enjoy morning coffee outdoors without high-maintenance planting.
- Bee Way Pergola – Plant at the foot of a short pergola with globe thistle and herbs to create a buzzing, scented walkway – for wildlife-friendly families new to training climbers.
Technical cultivar profile
| Trait |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Climbing rose group; registered as KORlilub, marketed as Reine Lucia Climbing rose KORlilub, also known in exhibitions as Lichtkönigin Lucia, premium gold cultivar authenticity verified. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Reimer Kordes at W. Kordes’ Söhne, Germany; cross of ‘Zitronenfalter’ × ‘Cläre Grammerstorf’; introduced and registered in 1966 for garden and landscape use. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds ADR status awarded in 1968, reflecting period testing under German trial conditions for garden performance, ornamental value and structural qualities at the time of introduction. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Medium climber with upright habit, dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickles; typical height 150–240 cm, spread 80–140 cm, suitable for walls, arches and compact pergolas. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped clustered flowers, 13–25 petals, large bloom size around 7–10 cm; remontant, producing a generous first flush followed by a plentiful repeat flowering later in the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vivid lemon-yellow with golden sheen; buds open deep yellow then lighten to creamy yellow with a stronger centre; moderate colour retention with gentle fading, ARS dy, RHS 13A outer, 14B inner. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength, clearly noticeable scent of pleasant character, evident in still air near seating areas; fragrance combines well with use as a wall or arch rose for close-up enjoyment. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms spherical, orange-red hips about 12–17 mm in diameter in moderate numbers, extending ornamental interest into late season and offering some wildlife value in informal plantings. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Very hardy, tolerating approximately −32 to −29 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 5, USDA 4b); disease resistance moderate to rust-sensitive, so regular monitoring and protection are advised. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with free-draining soil; plant 135–140 cm apart for hedging or mass effect, wider as specimen; needs attentive care and plant protection in damp climates to maintain foliage quality. |
Reine Lucia Climbing rose KORlilub offers manageable height, long-season lemon-yellow blooms and reliable hardiness on a durable own-root framework, making it a thoughtful choice for easygoing coastal-style gardens.