DELROSAR – pale pink climbing rose - Delbard
Step out after rain and be greeted by a curtain of fragrance and soft, pale-pink blooms: DELROSAR brings a romantic, vertical accent to small London front gardens while coping well with cool, damp spells and brisk coastal winds. This large-flowered climber offers season-long colour with very full, self-cleaning blossoms that keep the display tidy with minimal effort. Its dense, dark green foliage clothes arches, fences and porch pillars, giving reliable structure through many years thanks to the inherent longevity of an own-root plant that can quietly regenerate from the base. Planted once with decent drainage and a sturdy support, it matures from establishing roots, to strong shoots, to full ornamental presence over three seasons, rewarding patient, low-fuss gardeners. For a contained footprint, it can even be trained in a 40–50 litre pot for a softly scented vertical feature.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front-garden arch or porch entrance |
Ideal for framing a narrow front path with romantic, medium-strength scent and large, full blooms, creating a welcoming focal point without complex pruning, for time-poor but style-conscious homeowners. |
| Vertical screen on a fence or trellis |
The dense, dark green foliage and repeat flowering habit form a long-lasting vertical curtain that softens boundaries and adds privacy in compact gardens for practical, space-saving urbanites. |
| Climbing rose for small arbours and pergolas |
Rambling growth and self-cleaning flowers make it well suited to training over light structures, where it quickly provides shade and romance with moderate maintenance for relaxed weekend gardeners. |
| Container-trained climber on balconies or patios |
Works reliably in a 40–50 litre container with a sturdy obelisk or trellis, giving vertical interest and fragrance where soil is limited, for balcony and terrace-focused city-dwellers. |
| Low-input rose for cool, damp or coastal areas |
Handles cool, wet spells and breezier sites while maintaining foliage and flower quality with only moderate disease management, suiting climate-aware coastal and high-rainfall gardeners. |
| Long-term feature in established family gardens |
Own-root growth underpins a long-lived framework that can be refreshed from the base, preserving its ornamental role for many seasons, appealing to families planning for enduring plantings. |
| Season-spanning colour accent near seating areas |
Good repeat flowering with abundant second flush keeps colour and scent near benches or patios over a long season, offering easy enjoyment for those who want impact with little ongoing effort. |
| Structured backdrop for perennials and grasses |
The steady height and rambling habit form a stable vertical backdrop behind perennials, complementing changing border schemes year after year for design-minded yet practically inclined beginners. |
Styling ideas
- Romantic-Entrance – Train DELROSAR over a slim metal arch flanked by lavender and nepeta to create a fragrant tunnel to your front door – ideal for terraced-house owners wanting maximum charm in minimal space.
- Soft-Screen – Cover a functional side fence with this climber, underplanting with airy grasses like Carex flacca and Japanese anemones for movement and long-season texture – perfect for privacy-seeking urban families.
- Balcony-Column – Grow DELROSAR in a 50-litre pot with a slim obelisk, pairing with drought-tolerant sage for foliage contrast – suited to flat-dwellers wanting vertical interest without deep soil.
- Evening-Perfume – Place a small pergola or bench beneath its arching canes, adding soft white perennials to echo the veining of the blooms – for those who unwind outdoors after work with a book.
- Cottage-Stripe – Let the pale pink, finely striped flowers ramble along a low front wall, mixed with Crocosmia ‘Lucifer’ for fiery contrast – appealing to colour-loving gardeners who enjoy a gently informal look.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Registered as DELrosar, marketed as Delrosar Intense Fragrances DELrosar; ARS exhibition name Billet Doux, a French term meaning “love letter”, reflecting its romantic character. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Georges Delbard, France, introduced and registered in 2010 by Pépinières et Roseraies Georges Delbard and Georges Delbard SA; precise parentage remains undocumented. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Large-flowered climber with rambling habit, 240–360 cm high, 90–150 cm spread; dense, slightly glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickles, forming a well-clothed, vertical framework. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, very full, cup-shaped blooms with over 40 petals, borne in clusters; repeats well throughout the season with notably abundant second flush, and good natural self-cleaning of spent flowers. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pale pink with fine irregular white striping (RHS 65C–65D); striping softens to veining as blooms open, eventually fading towards creamy white, with stronger fading under intense sunlight. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Part of an intensive fragrance collection; offers a medium-strength, pleasantly noticeable rosy scent, especially effective along paths or near seating where gentle air movement carries the perfume. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate quantities of ellipsoidal hips, 10–14 mm in diameter, turning orange-red; decorative late-season feature where spent flowers are not fully deadheaded. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7, hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C and USDA Zone 6b; disease resistance moderate, with balanced susceptibility to black spot, powdery mildew and rust under typical garden conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best on fences, walls, arches, arbours or pergolas at 140–240 cm spacing; tolerates partial shade, with medium maintenance needs and occasional plant protection recommended in humid climates. |
DELROSAR offers a long-lived, fragrant, repeat-flowering vertical display on its own roots, providing enduring romance and dependable structure in compact gardens for those ready to plant once and enjoy for years to come.