BORSOD – red flowerbed floribunda rose - Márk
Picture a soft Irish drizzle glistening on clusters of mid-red blooms, their velvety colour glowing against fresh green foliage in your front garden. BORSOD is a compact floribunda bred for easy care, thriving in typical Irish conditions with good tolerance of damp air and rainfall. Its bushy habit and repeat-flowering clusters create a long season of cheerful flowers from early summer well into autumn. As an own-root rose, it offers reassuring longevity and dependable regrowth after pruning or weather damage, settling in steadily with roots in year one, stronger shoots in year two and full garden impact by year three. Ideal for neat bedding, low hedging or a bold cottage-garden accent in small borders, it gives reliable structure and volume without demanding advanced gardening skills or constant attention.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden flowerbed by the path |
The compact 40–55 cm height and dense foliage make BORSOD perfect for edging a front path, creating a welcoming ribbon of mid-red blooms all summer. Easy to keep tidy with light pruning, it suits small spaces and busy, style-conscious homeowners, especially beginners. |
| Low informal hedge along a driveway |
Plant at 30 cm spacing for a low, bushy hedge that reads as a continuous band of red when in flower. The even growth and moderate care needs give structure without fussy clipping, ideal for families wanting definition without high-maintenance formality, including hobby-gardeners. |
| Cottage-style mixed border in a family garden |
Its floribunda clusters and raspberry-red overtones blend beautifully with perennials, adding that “girly” cottage-garden charm. Remontant flowering keeps the border lively even when earlier perennials fade, appealing to romantic-planting fans and relaxed homeowners. |
| Small specimen rose in a compact lawn |
Used as a single specimen at 55 cm spacing, the rounded, bushy habit gives a neat focal point that stays in scale with modest front lawns. Own-root growth ensures it rebuilds well after winter pruning, suiting practical, long-term planners and cautious beginners. |
| Mass bedding in housing-estate front gardens |
At around 8–9 plants per m², BORSOD forms a carpet of colour that reads well from the pavement. The good colour retention and clustered habit provide strong visual impact with straightforward seasonal care, ideal for shared spaces and low-input urban-gardeners. |
| Raised bed on heavier Irish clay soils |
In raised beds with improved drainage, its moderate disease resistance and tolerance of damp air make it reliable where humidity and wet spells might trouble fussier roses. This suits clay-garden owners who want dependable flowering without specialist techniques, typically busy-owners. |
| Large container near the front door (40–50 L minimum) |
Planted in a 40–50 litre pot with quality compost, the compact spread and repeat flowering create an inviting accent by the doorstep. Own-root resilience makes long-term container growing more forgiving, aligning with convenience-focused, space-limited city-dwellers. |
| Park-style planting strip in a long, narrow garden |
In a side-strip or boundary bed, its remontant, abundant second flush keeps colour going in shorter Irish summers, linking different garden areas visually. Medium care needs and reliable structure appeal to families wanting a simple, cohesive look, particularly novice gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Romantic Border – weave BORSOD through a mix of pink and white perennials and airy grasses for a soft, storybook feel – perfect for cottage-garden lovers seeking gentle colour.
- Formal-Entry Rhythm – repeat short rows of BORSOD along the path to your door for a unified red theme that looks composed even in winter – ideal for neat, design-minded homeowners.
- Terraced-Front Accent – combine BORSOD with Heuchera and Liatris in a raised brick bed for a colourful, vertical-and-horizontal contrast – great for urban terraced houses with limited depth.
- Family-Friendly Hedge – line a driveway or play-lawn edge with closely spaced BORSOD for a soft boundary that flowers for months – suited to families wanting structure without sharp formality.
- Container Welcome – plant a single BORSOD in a 50 L pot with trailing herbs for scent and texture around its red blooms – ideal for busy city gardeners who want easy front-door impact.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda bedding rose from the Rósra bhláthchlóis group, traded as Borsod Bedding rose Márk; flowerbed or shrub type floribunda with a name honouring the historic Hungarian county Borsod. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Márk Gergely at Kertészeti Kutatóintézet, Budapest, Hungary, around 1991; parentage unknown, introduced commercially by PharmaRosa Ltd., with later distribution for garden use in Europe. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact, bushy shrub to about 40–55 cm high and 45–60 cm wide, with dense, mid‑green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate thorns, forming neat, rounded plants suitable for edging and bedding. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, 4–7 cm, double cupped blooms with 26–39 petals, produced mainly in clusters; floribunda type with a remontant habit and particularly abundant second flowering period in season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Dark red buds open vivid scarlet, maturing to bright mid-red with velvety sheen, later softening towards raspberry-red; ARS MR, RHS 46A and 53B codes, with good colour retention in garden conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
No noticeable fragrance reported; bred primarily for colour effect and bedding performance rather than scent, making it a visual feature rose rather than a fragrance-led choice. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small spherical hips, 6–10 mm in diameter, red RHS 46A; decorative only in a modest way and not a dominant ornamental feature of the plant. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b); good heat and moderate drought tolerance, black spot resistant with moderate susceptibility to powdery mildew and rust in humid seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny sites with well-drained soil; suits flower beds, park plantings and low hedges. Medium maintenance with occasional plant protection and standard rose feeding for sustained flowering. |
BORSOD – red flowerbed floribunda rose - Márk offers compact, long-season colour, reliable structure in small gardens and the durable, regenerative reassurance of an own-root plant, making it a thoughtful choice for relaxed, lasting planting schemes.