WILD EAGLE – burgundy park rose - Ruf
Step out to a London front garden after rain and WILD EAGLE greets you with a far‑carried, classic rose scent and a quiet sense of balance. This robust shrub rose shrugs off damp weather and blustery conditions with reassuring resilience, making it well suited to small urban plots where rainwater must soak away naturally rather than rush to the drain. Its velvety burgundy blooms are generously remontant, drawing bees to the open stamens from early summer into autumn, while the dense, dark foliage forms an easy, tidy structure along paths or boundaries. As an own‑root plant, WILD EAGLE is a long‑term investment, regenerating strongly from the base after pruning or weather damage and keeping its ornamental value season after season. In a large container or border, the good self‑cleaning habit and low maintenance needs mean more time to simply linger in the fragrance and less time deadheading. Expect a calm development: strong roots in the first year, fuller shoots in the second, and confidently mature presence by the third, with bright red hips adding winter interest.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Low‑maintenance urban front garden |
Ideal for busy city homeowners who want impact without fuss: WILD EAGLE combines low pruning and feeding needs with reliable repeat flowering, so the entrance stays welcoming through the season with very little work for the beginner gardener. |
| Pollinator‑friendly, fragrant path edging |
The semi‑double, strongly scented flowers offer exposed stamens that are easy for bees to reach, while the bushy habit lines narrow paths with colour and perfume, creating a sensory route that also supports a wildlife‑minded household. |
| Salt‑tolerant front boundary or hedge |
Excellent tolerance of urban stress, including roadside salting and reflected heat, allows WILD EAGLE to form a tough, attractive hedge that keeps its dark foliage and rich flower colour even beside pavements used by a city‑living family. |
| Rain‑garden or heavy soil planting strip |
Well suited to gardens where water temporarily lingers after showers, it copes with difficult site conditions while still flowering freely, making it a dependable choice for sustainably managing wetter spots for the rain‑conscious gardener. |
| Feature shrub in small family borders |
The dense, upright‑bushy structure and moderate height create a natural focal point without overwhelming an average‑sized garden, offering long‑season burgundy blooms and winter hips for a space‑limited homeowner. |
| Large container on terrace or balcony |
In a 40–50 litre peat‑free container, WILD EAGLE’s own‑root vigour and good heat tolerance keep it flowering steadily, giving long‑term value on patios or balconies where easy watering and simple care suit a time‑pressed occupant. |
| Resilient coastal or exposed site |
Hybrid Rugosa heritage and strong disease resistance help it withstand wind, sun and fungal pressure, so even breezy, open gardens gain a durable, richly coloured shrub that reassures the coastal gardener. |
| Informal hedge with winter interest |
Abundant red hips follow the deep burgundy flowers, extending the display well into winter; combined with its long life on own roots, this makes a hedging line that matures beautifully for the long‑term planner. |
Styling ideas
- Velvet‑and‑grass – Underplant WILD EAGLE with feather reed‑grass for soft movement and a naturalistic, low‑maintenance front boundary – ideal for design‑aware but busy homeowners.
- Claret‑and‑white – Combine with Lychnis viscaria 'Alba' and creeping baby's‑breath to set off the dark blooms with airy white accents – perfect for small gardens needing light, feminine structure.
- Fragrant‑path – Line a narrow path with WILD EAGLE and drought‑tolerant herbs such as lavender or nepeta to create a scented, bee‑friendly walkway – suited to families who stroll the garden daily.
- Container‑focus – Plant one shrub in a 50‑litre pot by the front door, underplanted with trailing thyme, for season‑long colour and fragrance – excellent for renters or balcony gardeners.
- Hip‑and‑hedge – Use a loose row of WILD EAGLE as a boundary, leaving the rose hips for winter colour and wildlife – attractive to sustainability‑minded urban households.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
WILD EAGLE – burgundy park rose – shrub, Hybrid Rugosa type; commercial group Park – shrub rose, own‑root, supplied as eleanorROSE® ORIGINAL 2‑litre container for family gardens. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Georg Ruf, Rosenschule Ruf, Germany; introduced 2008 with parentage unknown, selected for robust shrub performance and strong colour in private gardens and public green spaces. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub to around 90–135 cm high and 65–100 cm wide, densely thorned with dark matte foliage, forming a full, hedge‑capable framework that holds its shape with minimal pruning. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi‑double, flat, medium‑sized blooms in clusters, around 13–25 petals, reliably remontant with particularly abundant second flowering, and good self‑cleaning as petals drop cleanly from the hips. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep claret burgundy with subtle purple tones; colour retention very good, darkening to maroon with smoky lilac edges, with only slight fading from bud through full bloom to petal fall over the season. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, far‑scented classic rose fragrance, noticeable along paths and near seating; semi‑double blooms expose stamens that help draw pollinators while still providing a traditional scented‑garden feel. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces numerous bright red ellipsoidal hips, about 24–36 mm; hips follow flowering and persist into winter, adding ornamental colour and seasonal interest in informal hedges or wildlife‑friendly borders. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
High resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; good heat and moderate drought tolerance; hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b), reliable in most UK regions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to hedges, borders, specimen and large containers; plant 50–90 cm apart; prefers well‑drained soil, tolerates partial shade and poor ground, with low feeding and pruning needs once established. |
WILD EAGLE offers long-season burgundy bloom, strong fragrance and resilient health on a durable own-root framework that settles in for years of easy enjoyment, making it a thoughtful choice for your next garden planting.