HERKULES ® – cream-coloured lilac-shaded nostalgia rose - Kordes
If you would like a romantic, nostalgic shrub rose that feels at home in a small London front garden as well as a family back garden, HERKULES® offers softly coloured, lavender rosettes with a strong, fresh-fruity fragrance on a compact, bushy habit. Its dense dark-green foliage and medium self-cleaning means you enjoy a consistently tidy, flowering display with only light deadheading. As an own-root plant it is bred for long-term stability, gradually building strength below ground before rewarding you above: roots in year one, shoots in year two, full ornamental value by year three. Once established, it shows moderate tolerance of summer dry spells and copes well with typical British showers and breezes, helping you manage heavier soils and rainfall in a sustainable way. Ideal for peat-free containers of 40–50 litres or more, it becomes a lasting structural feature in your garden scene.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Statement shrub for a small urban front garden |
The compact, bushy habit and 100–150 cm height make HERKULES® a balanced focal point beside a doorway, railings or path, giving structure without overwhelming a narrow space and suiting privacy-conscious homeowners. |
| Nostalgic flowering hedge along a front boundary |
Planting at around 50 cm intervals creates a soft, romantic hedge with very double rosette blooms that look refined from the pavement, ideal for those wanting classic character rather than hard landscaping-only front plots for urbanites. |
| Feature rose in a mixed perennial bed |
The mid-height shrub form and dense, dark foliage act as a leafy backdrop to perennials, while the silvery-lilac flowers sit beautifully among blues, whites and pastels, appealing to creative hobby-gardeners. |
| Large container for terrace, balcony or paved front area |
In a peat-free mix and a pot of at least 40–50 litres, HERKULES® establishes a steady root system and delivers repeat flowering without daily fuss, suiting busy but design-conscious balcony-owners. |
| Rain-friendly planting by paths and driveways |
The shrub copes well with ordinary British showers and breezier conditions, so it can soften hard surfaces where runoff collects, offering romantic colour in spots that still experience frequent rain to reassure sustainability-minded gardeners. |
| Long-term structural rose for family gardens |
As an own-root plant it ages steadily, with strong regrowth if stems are cut back hard and no risk of graft suckers, giving long-lived ornamental value that rewards patient, future-oriented families. |
| Cut flowers for the house |
The large, very double blooms with a fresh, fruity scent are well suited to cutting at half-open stage, bringing romance indoors and providing a gentle introduction to home flower arranging for enthusiastic beginners. |
| Partial-shade flower bed near buildings |
Tolerant of partial shade, HERKULES® can still flower well on aspects that miss some sun each day, such as narrow side returns or north-east corners, offering options to space-limited town-dwellers. |
Styling ideas
- ROMANTIC FRONTAGE – Line a short path with HERKULES® and lavender or nepeta for a softly scented welcome – ideal for London terrace owners wanting charm without complex maintenance.
- PASTEL BED – Combine with pale foxgloves, white astrantia and soft grasses to highlight the silvery-lilac blooms – suited to gardeners seeking a calm, balanced family border.
- CONTAINER FOCUS – Plant one shrub in a 50-litre pot with trailing thyme and ivy for structure on patios – perfect for balcony and courtyard users with limited soil.
- EVENING CORNER – Set HERKULES® with white sage and soft lighting so the pale flowers glow at dusk – appealing to busy professionals who relax outdoors after work.
- SOFT HEDGE – Create a low, informal hedge and underplant with hardy geraniums to hide bare stems – useful for families wanting gentle boundaries instead of solid fencing.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Shrub rose from the MärchenRosen® collection; registered as KORherkul, traded as Herkules®; nostalgic, romantic-style garden rose suitable for private gardens and small urban spaces. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by W. Kordes & Sons in Germany around 2000, introduced 2007; parentage undisclosed; developed as a romantically styled shrub with reliable repeat flowering and garden performance. |
| Awards and recognition |
Gold Medal Kortrijk 2009, Bronze Medal Tokyo 2008, Bronze Medal IGS-Wilhelmsburg 2013, highlighting its ornamental appeal and tested show performance in international trials. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub, around 100–150 cm tall and 50–80 cm wide; moderately thorny, with dense, slightly glossy dark-green foliage; self-cleaning is moderate, so some deadheading improves neatness. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, very double rosette flowers with more than 40 petals, borne mainly in corymbs; remontant habit with abundant repeat flushes providing extended seasonal interest in beds and borders. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Delicate cream-lilac to pastel lavender with a silvery bloom; colour lightens as blooms open, sometimes showing a cool silver-lilac veil, giving subtle variation through the flowering period. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, fresh, fruity scent typical of nostalgic shrub roses; fragrance noticeable on still days and near seating areas; primarily ornamental as dense petal formation limits access for pollinating insects. |
| Hip characteristics |
Very double flowers set hips only occasionally; when present, expect small red, ellipsoidal hips around 8–13 mm in diameter, adding minor autumn interest without significant self-seeding. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately -21 to -18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b); heat tolerant with moderate drought tolerance; disease susceptibility moderate, especially rust, so monitor and treat when necessary. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, parks, urban green spaces, hedging or as a solitary shrub; prefers well-drained soil, regular feeding, and timely pruning; partial shade tolerant but best flowering in good light. |
HERKULES ® – cream-coloured lilac-shaded nostalgia rose - Kordes offers romantic colour, a compact shrub form and rewarding fragrance on a resilient own-root plant, making it a thoughtful long-term choice for your garden.