REBECCA MARY – apricot bedding floribunda rose
With its warm peach blooms and subtly spicy scent, Rebecca Mary brings a gentle sense of balance to compact front gardens and small beds, even where soils are heavy and seasons are wet and windy, helping you create a soft, sustainable welcome. This bushy floribunda flowers generously in recurring flushes, offering reliable colour from early summer well into autumn with little fuss. As an own‑root rose it is bred for long-term resilience, quietly building a deep root system and steady top growth for a stable, mature display over time. In a London terrace front garden or balcony pot, a single 40–50 litre container is enough to showcase its rounded habit and glossy mid‑green foliage, while moderate disease tolerance supports easy-going maintenance rather than intensive spraying. Over the first three years it gradually shifts from establishing roots, to extending shoots, to reaching its full ornamental potential as a softly glowing, eco-minded focal point for relaxed urban families.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Small front garden flowerbed |
The compact, bushy habit and 75–105 cm height make Rebecca Mary ideal for neat beds in modest front gardens, giving a long season of peach-toned colour with minimal shaping or complex care, especially suited to the busy urban gardener. |
| Rainwater-friendly urban border |
Planted into improved clay or shallow chalk soils, this floribunda copes well where rainfall and blustery showers are frequent, supporting front gardens that rely on stored rainwater rather than constant hose use and appealing to the sustainability-focused homeowner. |
| Informal mixed planting with perennials |
Its warm apricot-peach flowers blend easily with soft blues and whites, such as lavender, sage or catmint, creating a relaxed, romantic effect without strict spacing rules, perfect for the style-conscious beginner. |
| Family-friendly low rose hedge |
At 50 cm spacing, Rebecca Mary forms a low, bushy line that gently defines paths or play areas without feeling harsh or formal, and its moderate prickliness makes it manageable around children for the typical family garden user. |
| Large patio pot or balcony container |
In a single 40–50 litre peat-free container, this variety offers a tidy, upright-bushy shape and repeat flowering through the season, with simple deadheading and watering routines suiting the time-pressed balcony owner. |
| Long-term structural planting |
As an own-root rose, it does not rely on grafts, so it ages steadily, regenerates well from the base after pruning or weather damage, and maintains an even shape over many years, rewarding the patient garden improver. |
| Low-input decorative bed in public or shared spaces |
Medium disease resistance and moderate maintenance needs make it a sensible choice where regular but not intensive care is realistic, still delivering tidy foliage and presentable blooms for the community-minded gardener. |
| Seasonal highlight near seating or doorway |
The mild, spicy fragrance and evolving peach-to-cream colour provide subtle interest close to benches or entrances, offering gentle sensory appeal without overwhelming scent, well suited to the comfort-seeking homeowner. |
Styling ideas
- Peach-Perfumed Welcome – Line a terraced-house path with Rebecca Mary underplanted with Iberis sempervirens for a soft apricot-and-white entrance – ideal for urban front-garden owners.
- Rain-Kissed Border – Combine with moisture-tolerant calamint and low grasses in improved clay to make a resilient, rain-friendly street-side strip – ideal for sustainability-focused households.
- Balcony Glow – Plant a single specimen in a 50 litre container with trailing lobelia to spill over the rim, creating a vertical accent – ideal for balcony and small-patio gardeners.
- Soft Family Hedge – Use a short run of plants at 50 cm spacing along a drive, edging with catmint to blur lines and add movement – ideal for families wanting gentle structure.
- Cottage-Modern Mix – Thread Rebecca Mary through lavender and sage in a loose, low-maintenance scheme that suits both cottage and contemporary facades – ideal for style-conscious beginners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda bed rose registered as DICjury, marketed as Rebecca Mary Bedding rose DICjury; exhibition name Rebecca Mary, in the bedding rose commercial group for garden and cut-flower use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Colin Dickson, Dickson Nurseries Ltd, Northern Ireland; cross of ‘Spice of Life’ × ‘Light Fantastic’, bred and registered in the United Kingdom in 2006 and introduced to commerce in 2009. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holder of the UK Gold Standard (2010) with multiple trial honours: RNRS Trial Ground Certificate, Belfast Best floribunda, Glasgow Certificate of Merit, and Silver Certificate at The Hague trials. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, rounded shrub reaching 75–105 cm in height and 70–90 cm spread, with dense, glossy mid-green foliage and moderate prickles, forming a compact, well-filled plant for beds and containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cupped flowers with 13–25 petals, borne in clusters on floribunda-style trusses; large blooms around 2.75–3.95 inches across, repeating freely with particularly abundant second flushes. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Warm peach tonality (RHS 23C, 15B) shifting from rich peach-yellow buds to soft peach-pink, then fading to cream-peach; colour retention moderate, with gradual, decorative transitions through each bloom stage. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild but noticeable scent with a spicy character that complements, rather than dominates, small seating areas; fragrance best appreciated at close range during warm, still parts of the day. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces occasional ellipsoidal hips, 10–14 mm in diameter, coloured orange-red; hip set is generally light and ornamental effect is subtle rather than a major seasonal feature in most plantings. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7; Swedish Zone 3; USDA 6b); disease resistance rated medium overall, with moderate susceptibility to powdery mildew, black spot and rust in humid conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions for beds, containers or urban green spaces; plant 50–55 cm apart, 3.2–3.7 plants/m², in well-drained improved soil, with occasional pest and disease checks and routine deadheading. |
Rebecca Mary offers long-season peach colour, a compact, easy-care habit and durable own-root performance; a thoughtful choice if you seek calm, sustainable structure for a small garden.