ILAYDA – red-yellow hybrid tea rose - Dickson & Dickson
Imagine returning from the beach to sit behind a gentle coastal windbreak with sunrise colours glowing in your teacup-border: ILAYDA offers glowing blooms, a compact, bushy habit and reliable repeat-flowering that copes well with breezy, salt-touched air and careful water management on heavier soils. Its golden-yellow and scarlet petals open on sturdy, straight stems ideal for cutting, while dense, glossy foliage gives structure even between flushes. As an own-root plant it establishes steadily, building roots in year one, stronger shoots in year two and by year three delivering a full, long-lived ornamental display for low-fuss coastal-inspired gardens.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small coastal front garden bed |
Compact height and spread make ILAYDA easy to place in modest front gardens without overwhelming paths or windows, while its bushy structure provides a gentle sense of shelter along exposed drives for the relaxed homeowner. |
| Feature rose in a 50–60 litre container |
The strong, upright stems and dense foliage suit a single large pot on a veranda or patio, where regular watering can be managed easily and flowers are perfectly placed for cutting by the busy urbanite. |
| Cutting patch for home-arranged bouquets |
Large, cupped, very double flowers on long, straight stems give excellent vase performance, so a small bed near the back door can reliably supply colourful, cocktail-toned stems throughout summer for the enthusiastic beginner. |
| Warm, sheltered coastal seating area |
Good heat tolerance and moderate disease resistance mean ILAYDA copes well beside a suntrap terrace, adding colour where you sit for tea after beach walks, even when coastal winds and summer warmth test less robust plants for the relaxed coastal-lover. |
| Mixed bed with perennials |
Glossy, dark green foliage with a bronzy tinge pairs well with silvery or blue-textured companions, giving all-season structure so that even between flushes the border looks intentional and tidy for the style-conscious gardener. |
| Family garden edging or path line |
Recommended spacing allows a low, colourful line along paths or lawns, guiding movement through the garden while keeping thorns away from play areas through simple pruning, suiting the practical family. |
| Low-maintenance own-root rose corner |
As an own-root rose it recovers well from winter damage or hard pruning, maintaining flower quality and character year after year with modest care, an advantage for those wanting lasting value with minimal effort as a time-pressed gardener. |
| Shingle-style coastal border |
Placed in well-drained pockets within shingle, ILAYDA handles sun and breeze, provided watering is monitored during dry spells, allowing a relaxed, seaside feel without excessive upkeep for the coastal-veranda owner. |
Styling ideas
- Cocktail Glow Border – Combine ILAYDA with sea kale and blue Festuca for a sunset-on-shingle effect beside pale gravel – ideal for coastal-style enthusiasts seeking a relaxed, beachy entrance.
- Veranda Tea Corner – Plant ILAYDA in a 50–60 litre terracotta pot with trailing thyme at the base to frame a small bistro set – perfect for apartment dwellers wanting a simple, elegant focal point.
- Girly Shell Walk – Line a short garden path with ILAYDA and soft pink Aquilegia, adding a seashell mulch band for a playful, feminine look – suited to families creating a charming route to a seating nook.
- Cottage Cut-Flower Strip – Run a narrow bed of ILAYDA along a sunny fence, interplanted with airy Stachys byzantina, to give easy-access stems for vases – good for hobby florists favouring reliable colour.
- Sunset Seating Backdrop – Use a small group of ILAYDA behind a bench with low lavender in front to soften edges and add fragrance – appealing to busy owners wanting structured calm without complex maintenance.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea florist rose; registered as DICobey, sold as ILAYDA Hybrid tea rose DICobey; ARS exhibition name Tequila Sunrise, reflecting its cocktail-inspired yellow-red colouring. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Patrick and Colin Dickson, Dickson Nurseries Ltd, Northern Ireland; cross of ‘Bonfire Night’ × ‘Freedom’; bred 1986 in the UK and introduced commercially from 1989 onwards. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated exhibition rose with multiple RNRS and Dublin honours, including RNRS Gold Medal (1988) and RHS Award of Garden Merit (1993), reflecting both show quality and garden reliability. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, moderately thorny plant, 70–90 cm tall and 50–70 cm wide, with dense, glossy dark green foliage showing a bronzy tint; flowers usually solitary on upright, well-presented stems. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, cupped, very double blooms with over 40 petals; produced mainly singly on stems; strong repeat-flowering, with a generous second flush given standard feeding and deadheading practices. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vibrant golden-yellow base with scarlet-red petal edges; colour softens slightly in strong sun but contrast usually persists, moving through honey-yellow and pink-orange tones as blooms mature and fade. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Light, classic rose fragrance; pleasantly noticeable at close range without overwhelming nearby seating areas; heavily double form makes it mainly ornamental rather than focused on pollinator support. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional ovoid hips, 10–14 mm across, coloured red (RHS 41A); generally sparse enough not to distract from flowering, but adding a discreet seasonal detail in late season when present. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
RHS H6 rating with hardiness to around −15 to −12 °C; moderate resistance to black spot, mildew and rust; tolerates UK summer heat but needs steady watering through extended dry or windy periods. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, edging, containers of at least 40–50 litres, cutting gardens and small parks; plant 50–60 cm apart; prefers well-drained soil, regular feeding and moderate deadheading to maintain display. |
ILAYDA Hybrid tea rose DICobey offers compact structure, repeat-flowering colour and reliable cutting stems on a durable own-root plant; consider it if you would like long-term impact from a manageable, coastal-suited rose.