THÉRÈSE BUGNET – pink park rose - Bugnet
Imagine stepping onto a seaside veranda after a blustery walk, the air carrying a hint of salt while a bank of rugosa roses moves in the breeze and their strong, spicy-fruity fragrance cuts through the coastal air. THÉRÈSE BUGNET is a resilient park-shrub rose that settles quickly, ideal where winds are frequent and soils demand reliable anchoring and drainage without fussy maintenance. Its bushy, dense foliage forms a natural screen, while waves of soft pink, double blooms provide a long season of colour from an early-summer flush followed by a gentler repeat. Own-root growing gives reassuring longevity, regenerating steadily below ground so you do less over the years while the plant continues to mature. In a typical family garden or compact coastal plot, you can expect roots to establish in the first year, stronger shoots and shape in the second, and full ornamental effect by the third, making this rose a quietly dependable coastal-style companion for busy gardeners who value low-input ease and long-lived garden structure.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Coastal windbreak hedge |
The tall, bushy habit and dense branching allow THÉRÈSE BUGNET to form a tough, filtering hedge that softens strong breezes in exposed Cornwall or Devon gardens while coping calmly with salt-laden air, wind and heavy showers; ideal for the time-poor coastal homeowner |
| Low-maintenance family boundary |
Planted at hedge spacing, this slightly thorny shrub builds a solid, green framework that needs only occasional pruning to stay in shape, giving privacy and structure without complicated regimes, suiting those who want a dependable rose backdrop with minimal effort gardener |
| Feature shrub near seating |
Positioned by a bench or veranda, the strong spicy-fruity scent and pastel pink flowers create an inviting, restful corner for afternoon tea, with remontant flowering providing recurring interest through the season, especially rewarding in compact, frequently used spaces beginner |
| Own-root, long-lived focal point |
As an own-root shrub it rebuilds from its base if cut back by weather or age, avoiding graft failures and offering many years of reliable presence, a good choice where you want to plant once and enjoy a stable, maturing rose structure over the long term planner |
| Small coastal front garden |
This variety combines good heat and moderate drought tolerance with strong winter hardiness, so it copes with hot, reflective pavements and chilly winds alike, giving a forgiving, tidy shrub that works hard in tight front gardens with challenging microclimates town-dweller |
| Large containers on veranda |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container with free-draining compost, its upright, bushy growth and generous foliage make an excellent seasonal screen around decks or balconies, bringing traditional rose charm to rented or paved spaces where in-ground planting is limited balcony-owner |
| Mixed coastal-style border |
Used among ornamental grasses and perennials, this shrub’s medium-sized, cluster-flowered blooms and strong framework knit planting schemes together, giving height, texture and repeat colour in borders designed around sea kale, fescues or lavender-inspired combinations stylist |
| Country-style cutting corner |
While not bred solely for cutting, its cupped, double blooms and fragrance lend themselves to informal jugs and small arrangements, and the shrub form means you can snip stems here and there without spoiling the plant’s overall outline, ideal for relaxed home use flower-lover |
Styling ideas
- Veranda Screen – Line a coastal veranda with THÉRÈSE BUGNET in 50-litre tubs to create a gently scented, wind-softening pink screen – perfect for seaside tea-drinkers.
- Shingle Drift – Plant a loose row through gravel with sea kale and blue fescues so the dense shrub structure anchors the scheme while grasses echo dunes – ideal for coastal-style fans.
- Pink Hedge – Use hedge spacing along a boundary, underplant with spring bulbs, and enjoy a long-lived, low-maintenance flowering barrier – suitable for busy families.
- Relaxed Border – Combine with tall phlox and airy switchgrass for layered height, soft pink repeats and an easy-care cottage-meets-coast look – appealing to laid-back gardeners.
- Fragrant Nook – Place a single specimen by a favourite chair with simple paving and a pot of lavender nearby so scent and shelter come together – ideal for contemplative homeowners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
THÉRÈSE BUGNET is a shrub, Hybrid Rugosa park rose; an unregistered variety grown under its long-established trade name, used mainly as a garden and landscape shrub rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in Canada in 1941 by Georges Charles Julius Bugnet from Rosa rugosa seedling × ‘Betty Bland’; introduced in 1950 and now widely grown in cold and coastal climates. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit, confirming reliable performance, sound health and solid ornamental value under a broad range of UK garden conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous, bushy shrub reaching about 130–200 cm high and 110–180 cm wide, with dense, matt dark-green foliage and comparatively few prickles, forming substantial screening structure. |
| Flower morphology |
Produces medium-sized, cupped, double flowers with roughly 26–39 petals in clusters; remontant with a strong main flush and a lighter second flowering later in the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Buds open deep to mid-pink, ARS MP, RHS 68C–68D, then fade toward pastel pink and almost white centres, giving soft toning effects as each bloom ages in sun. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, distinctive spicy-fruity rose scent, noticeable near paths and seating; double flowers offer ornamental value first, with only limited appeal to pollinating insects. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasionally produces ovoid orange-red hips around 14–22 mm in diameter, adding modest late-season decorative interest when not deadheaded too thoroughly in autumn. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Shows very good resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; extremely hardy to about −46 to −43 °C, corresponding to RHS H7 and USDA Zone 2a, suiting exposed sites. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best at 85–155 cm spacing depending on hedge or specimen use; enjoys full sun or light shade with reasonable drainage; low maintenance, needing only periodic pruning and feeding. |
THÉRÈSE BUGNET offers a strongly fragrant, easy-care shrub with dense structural growth and long-lived own-root reliability, making it a thoughtful choice for relaxed coastal and family gardens.