ÁRPÁD-HÁZI PRÁGAI SZENT ÁGNES – pink bedding floribunda rose
Step out to your front path and be greeted by soft, pastel-pink cups of ÁRPÁD-HÁZI PRÁGAI SZENT ÁGNES, a bushy floribunda that turns a small Irish garden into a gentle, girly escape. Bred by Hungarian rosarian Márk Gergely in 1998, this flowerbed rose thrives in typical Irish conditions, even where summer days are short and rainfall can be frequent. Medium maintenance and good heat tolerance mean you are not tied to complicated care routines; a sunny spot, decent drainage on heavy clay and simple pruning keep it looking fresh. Own-root plants give long-term stability, quietly rebuilding if damaged and ageing into a dependable garden companion. Large, double blooms repeat generously, offering a cheerful, sweet but gentle scent along paths and under windows. Think of its development as a natural rhythm: roots settling in the first year, stronger shoots in the second, and full ornamental abundance by the third.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front-garden flowerbed beside a path |
The bushy stature and 7–10 cm double blooms create a soft, continuous ribbon of colour along a narrow front border, perfect for cottage and terraced streetscapes without demanding expert pruning skills, ideal for the beginner. |
| Low informal hedge along a driveway or boundary |
Planted at 50 cm, its dense mid‑green foliage and medium height build a light, flowery screen that softens hard boundaries while still allowing views, offering structure and charm with only occasional shaping, reassuring for the homeowner. |
| Mixed cottage-style border with perennials |
Its refined, pastel-pink cups pair beautifully with lady’s mantle, hemp-agrimony and other soft perennials, giving that romantic “girly” cottage feel while the floribunda habit keeps flowers coming all summer, delightful for the romantic. |
| Single specimen near a seating area |
Used as a solitary plant at about 90 cm spacing, it forms a rounded, elegant shrub whose mild, sweet fragrance and delicate porcelain tones invite close-up enjoyment without overwhelming the senses, perfect for the contemplative. |
| Urban terrace or small patio in a large container |
In a 40–50 litre pot with good drainage, it offers a generous display in very limited space; own-root growth adds resilience, so the plant copes better with minor neglect on busy weeks, well suited to the urbanite. |
| Family garden flowerbed in heavier Irish soils |
Given modest soil improvement and mulching, its medium disease resistance and robust bushy habit perform reliably even where wet weather is common and summers are short, easing worries for the time-poor parent. |
| Heat-exposed, sunny corner of the garden |
Good tolerance of heat and moderate drought means blooms and foliage hold up on warmer, more exposed sites, especially with regular mulching, giving colour continuity that reassures the climate-conscious gardener. |
| Cutting from the garden for small indoor vases |
Large, double, cup-shaped flowers with their light, sweet scent make charming informal posies; the remontant habit provides repeat stems across the season without stripping the bush, a pleasure for the home-flower lover. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-border ribbon – Plant in a loose curve and weave between Alchemilla and low grasses for a dreamy pastel edge – ideal for lovers of relaxed Irish cottage style.
- Terraced-front welcome – Line a short front path with repeated plants to frame the door in soft pink cups – perfect for city homeowners wanting a gentle, tidy welcome.
- Rosy-porch container – Grow one shrub in a 40–50 litre pot with trailing lobelia at the rim – suited to busy urban gardeners with limited ground space.
- Pastel-partnered drift – Combine with hemp-agrimony and airy perennials for a light, meadowy look – attractive for nature-oriented households seeking a soft-focus planting.
- Quiet-reading corner – Place a single shrub by a bench so pastel blooms and mild fragrance frame your seating – perfect for those who cherish calm relaxation outdoors.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
ÁRPÁD-HÁZI PRÁGAI SZENT ÁGNES is a floribunda flowerbed rose, exhibition shrub type, from the Rósra bhláthchlóis group, marketed under this trade name for reliable garden use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Márk Gergely in Hungary around 1998; parentage and breeding institution are not documented, with PharmaRosa® Ltd. later introducing it to wider Central European garden markets. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub reaching about 100–140 cm high and 65–95 cm wide, with dense, slightly glossy mid‑green foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a full, well‑clothed garden presence. |
| Flower morphology |
Large 7–10 cm, double, cup-shaped blooms with 26–39 petals appear mostly singly; the variety is remontant, delivering an abundant second flush after the main early-summer flowering. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft pastel pink flowers, RHS 65C outside, 65D inside; colour lightens towards petal edges and fades to almost whitish pink late on, giving a luminous, porcelain effect throughout the opening stages. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Light, sweet, restrained fragrance best appreciated at close range; the scent is gentle enough for seating areas or entrances where overly strong perfume might be unwelcome for some garden visitors. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional ellipsoid orange-red hips about 8–12 mm across may follow flowering, adding a discreet seasonal accent without dominating the overall ornamental effect in autumn. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7), with medium resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, plus good tolerance of heat and moderate drought in settled plants. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny sites with improved drainage on heavy soils; space 55 cm in beds or 50 cm for hedges, or grow one plant per 40–50 litre container, with occasional pruning and plant protection as needed. |
ÁRPÁD-HÁZI PRÁGAI SZENT ÁGNES offers long-season pastel blooms, a manageable bushy habit and own-root resilience that suits real Irish family gardens, making it a thoughtful choice if you value beauty without demanding care.