EPI D'OR – yellow hybrid‑tea rose – Delbard
Step outside to meet sunlight you can plant: EPI D'OR is a compact hybrid tea rose whose large, golden-yellow blooms bring a sense of cheerfulness even on grey Irish days, holding their colour reliably in rain and soft coastal wind while coping well with our cool, short summers and changeable skies. Bred for generous, repeat flowering, it offers a plentiful second flush of extra-large, exhibition-style blooms, perfect for cutting and bringing indoors. As an own-root rose, it settles in steadily with roots in the first year, stronger shoots the second, and full garden impact by the third, giving a long-lived, stable shrub rather than a short-term display. Bushy yet tidy in habit, it fits beautifully into small cottage-style borders and Dublin front gardens where easy maintenance, moderate disease tolerance and a mild, fruity fragrance matter more than constant fussing. With medium height and neat spread, you can use it singly or in small groups for reliable summer structure and a quietly sophisticated splash of yellow.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small to medium family front garden |
EPI D'OR’s compact, bushy structure fits narrow Dublin front beds without overwhelming paths or windows, yet still carries impressive exhibition-sized blooms for strong kerbside presence; ideal for the time-pressed urban homeowner beginner |
| Cottage-style mixed border |
The warm, clear yellow flowers and tidy shape give a cottage feel without becoming leggy, pairing beautifully with soft perennials while its own-root form promises a long-lived, reliable backbone to the border hobby-gardener |
| Cutting corner near the house |
With extra-large, long-stemmed blooms and a restrained fruity scent, this hybrid tea is excellent for regular cutting, providing elegant indoor arrangements from the garden with minimal specialist know-how homeowner |
| Feature rose in a small lawn bed |
The rose’s ability to repeat flower with a plentiful second flush means that even a single specimen in the lawn offers months of colour, delivering cheerful impact from one straightforward planting decision busy-urban-owner |
| Colour-focused, low-fuss display |
Very good colour retention in rain and soft wind keeps the golden tones clean and bright, so the plant looks freshly groomed with little deadheading, especially helpful where weekend attention is the norm value-seeker |
| Long-term planting plan for family gardens |
As an own-root shrub, EPI D'OR can recover well from weather damage or hard pruning and avoids graft-related decline, making it a sound, long-lived feature for those planning a stable, enduring garden structure planner |
| Exposed but not extreme coastal locations |
The medium, bushy frame and firm petals cope well with blustery Irish conditions and frequent showers, giving dependable flowers and form where more delicate varieties might suffer or shatter quickly nature-lover |
| Family border with moderate care routine |
Moderate disease resistance and simple pruning needs mean you mainly feed, mulch and watch it bloom, with occasional spraying if required, suiting gardens where there is interest but limited time for detailed care casual-gardener |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Ribbon – Plant a soft drift of EPI D'OR along a front path, weaving between low-growing geraniums and lamb’s ear to create a gentle, “girly” cottage look – ideal for romantic front-garden owners
- Golden-Accent – Use three plants in a triangle in the lawn, underplanted with golden barren strawberry to echo the yellow tones and keep soil covered – suited to busy families wanting easy structure
- Front-DoorGlow – Flank a Dublin terrace doorway with one rose each side in 50–60 litre containers, underplanted with trailing herbs for scent and softness – perfect for urban households with limited beds
- Cutting-Strip – Create a short cutting row backed by a fence, mixing EPI D'OR with pastel perennials so you can snip stems for vases while the border still looks full – great for those who love indoor bouquets
- Soft-Sunrise – Combine this yellow rose with pale pink and white cottage perennials in a sunny border, letting the strong colour retention anchor the scheme through the season – for colour-conscious garden stylers
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as DELépi; marketed as Epi d'Or in the Grands Parfums collection, with ARS exhibition name Épi d'Or, premium gold cultivar authenticity certified. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Georges Delbard in France from complex hybrid tea parentage, registered in 1981 and introduced in 1982, distributed originally by Delbard and later widely in European markets. |
| Awards and recognition |
Gold Medal and Plus Belle Rose de France at Lyon Rose Competition 1981, plus Gold Medal at Rome Rose Competition 1981, confirming high ornamental and exhibition value. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub 55–85 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, with moderately dense, matt, mid-green foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a compact, tidy plant suitable for borders and front gardens. |
| Flower morphology |
Very large, double, cup-shaped blooms over 10 cm across, usually solitary on stems; petal count 26–39, remontant with a generous second flush under normal garden conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Uniform medium yellow with warm golden sheen; RHS 14A outer, 14B inner; colour holds very well, only lightening gently toward lemon-yellow as blooms age, retaining decorative value to petal drop. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild but pleasant fruity scent, best appreciated at close range or in cut stems indoors; fragrance restrained rather than overpowering, making it suitable near doors, windows and small seating areas. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional ellipsoid hips, 15–21 mm, orange-red when ripe, adding discrete late-season interest but generally secondary to the main display of large, repeat-flowering yellow blooms. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish Zone 3); moderate resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, requiring standard monitoring and cultural care in damp seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Space 50–60 cm for hedging, 60 cm for mass planting, 100 cm as specimen; prefers well-drained but moisture-retentive soil, with mulching and occasional disease control to maintain best performance. |
EPI D'OR offers long-lived own-root reliability, generous repeat flowering and warm, colourfast yellow blooms for Irish family gardens, making it a thoughtful choice if you seek lasting beauty with manageable care.