ALBERICH – red bedding polyantha rose - Ruiter
With its compact habit and sparkling cherry-red clusters, Alberich brings a sense of balance to small London front gardens and shared family spaces, quietly thriving even where soil stays heavy after rain and needs thoughtful drainage solutions. This neat polyantha shrub forms dense, glossy foliage and abundant, self-renewing flower trusses that lend an air of timelessness to paths, railings and low hedges without demanding expert pruning skills. As an own-root rose, it builds strength from below, supporting a reassuring lifespan and the capacity to regrow cleanly after any winter damage or urban wear and tear. In containers of at least 40–50 litres it settles into an easy-care rhythm, rewarding modest maintenance with generous, repeat flowering from early summer onwards. Over its first three years it knits in steadily – Year 1 rooting, Year 2 structural shoots, Year 3 delivering full ornamental impact – creating a quietly sustainable feature that feels both reassuring and refreshingly modern.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Low, edging hedge along a terraced-house front |
Alberich’s compact 30–45 cm height and uniform spread make it ideal for a neat, low hedge that frames paths or railings without overwhelming narrow front gardens, suiting beginners who want clear structure with minimal shaping for the homeowner. |
| Mass bedding in small urban front gardens |
Planted in groups at the recommended spacing, clusters of cherry-red flowers create a continuous carpet of colour, while own-root vigour supports a long-lived planting that copes well with typical city conditions for the urban-gardener. |
| Rainwater-aware gravel strip or soakaway border |
The compact root system fits neatly beside drives or downpipes, working with permeable surfaces so excess water drains through rather than running off paving, helping soften practical drainage features for the sustainability-minded. |
| 40–50 litre container for balconies or paved yards |
In a large pot with peat-free compost, Alberich’s small stature and repeated flushes of blossom give season-long interest while remaining easy to water and tidy, offering reliable colour where soil access is limited for the balcony-owner. |
| Family play garden borders |
The modest height and rounded, compact form sit comfortably at the front of mixed borders, leaving sightlines open for supervising children while adding durable colour that tolerates occasional knocks for the busy-parent. |
| Low-maintenance park and communal planting |
Repeat flowering and moderate self-cleaning mean fewer interventions to keep beds presentable; own-root resilience allows plants to recover well from accidental damage or harsh pruning in shared spaces for the grounds-manager. |
| Clay or chalky front gardens with sun exposure |
Alberich performs best in full sun and, with improved soil structure, is a good choice where heavier or chalky soils are common, offering dependable bedding colour once drainage is sensibly managed for the beginner. |
| Simple, structured planting with wildlife accents |
Although only modestly attractive to pollinators, its semi-double flowers and occasional small red hips can be paired with nectar-rich perennials so structured colour combines with light ecological value for the nature-lover. |
Styling ideas
- Striped-railings – plant a single, neatly clipped line of Alberich beneath black iron railings, underplant with Alchemilla mollis for lime-green froth – ideal for design-conscious city dwellers.
- Cherry-ribbon – run a curving band of Alberich along a front lawn edge, threading between stepping stones for a soft yet structured look – suited to families wanting easy-care colour.
- Courtyard-gem – place one rose in a 50-litre terracotta pot, and ring it with low lavender or nepeta for fragrance and movement – perfect for balcony and patio gardeners.
- Crimson-carpet – mass-plant in a gravel mulched bed, dotted with upright sage and ornamental grasses to contrast the compact red mounds – for low-maintenance urban front gardens.
- Storybook-path – edge a narrow front path with repeated Alberich, interplanted with lady’s mantle and small spring bulbs for year-round charm – appealing to romantic, beginner gardeners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Polyantha bed rose marketed as Alberich, classified as a shrub-type bedding rose; used as a compact, cherry-red edging or mass-planting cultivar in smaller gardens and public plantings. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Gerrit de Ruiter in the Netherlands, 1954, from ‘Robin Hood’ × ‘Katharina Zeimet’; introduced by De Ruiter Innovations B.V. and established as a reliable, time-tested bedding rose. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact, bushy habit 30–45 cm high and wide with moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage; moderately thorny shoots and a neat outline that lends itself to edging, hedging and bedding schemes. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped flowers in tight clusters, small (0.5–1.5 in) with around 13–25 petals; remontant, with an abundant second flush that keeps bedding displays lively through the main season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vivid mid cherry-red blooms, ARS mR, RHS 46A–46B, slightly lighter towards the centre; colour holds well, only gently fading in strong sun, keeping a fresh, bright appearance on the plant. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very light, subtly fruity fragrance, often barely perceptible in outdoor conditions; chosen more for consistent colour and form than for scent, making it suited to visual rather than olfactory focal points. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small, spherical hips 5–8 mm across, red when ripe; not produced in heavy quantities but adding fine-grained seasonal detail if flowers are not deadheaded late in the year. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3, USDA 6b); good resistance to powdery mildew and black spot, moderate rust susceptibility, tolerates moderate heat and drought with summer watering. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with improved drainage, spacing 30–60 cm depending on use; works for beds, edging and urban green spaces; own-root plants support long-term structure and simpler renewal pruning. |
ALBERICH offers compact cherry-red bedding colour, dependable repeat flowering and own-root longevity in everyday gardens, making it a thoughtful choice if you value lasting structure with modest care needs.