GALLERANDAISE – pink bedding polyantha rose – Rateau
Picture a line of compact pink clusters along your path, the petals beading with rain as you take a short walk in soft light and green surroundings – this is where GALLERANDAISE feels at home. Its naturally compact habit and dense foliage make shaping a neat front border very straightforward, while its remontant flowering keeps beds lively from early summer into autumn, even when days grow shorter. Bred for low-input gardens, it brings reliably healthy foliage that shrugs off typical Irish fungal pressures and copes calmly with cool summers and frequent rain in exposed gardens. From an own-root start in your 2‑litre pot, it settles steadily – roots in the first year, confident shoots the second, full ornamental presence the third – giving a quietly long-lived structure you hardly need to fuss over. Planting is easy: ordinary garden soil with decent drainage, a sunny aspect, and a light mulch are usually enough, particularly in smaller Irish cottage plots or narrow city fronts. Over time, the bed fills into a soft, low border, edging paths and entrances with a cheerful, consistently tidy look that suits busy gardeners who still want a little everyday romance.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front border in a small family garden |
The naturally compact, bushy habit and 30–50 cm height make it ideal for the front of beds, where it forms a low, tidy line that does not smother smaller perennials or spill over paths, suiting time-poor but style-conscious front-garden homeowners and beginners. |
| Low hedge along a path or driveway |
Recommended spacings of 25–30 cm allow you to create a continuous flowering strip with dense foliage that reads as a low hedge, giving gentle structure and colour without clipping, particularly helpful for family homes seeking easy edging and definition. |
| Mass bedding in cottage-style planting |
Square or hexagonal planting at over six plants per square metre quickly produces a carpet of clustered pink blooms, ideal for a relaxed cottage feel that still looks organised, suiting those who want high visual impact from limited space and budget. |
| Entrance and doorway planting |
The continuous flushes of mid-pink flowers and neat mound shape frame front steps or porches without obstructing access, giving a welcoming, cheerful look that asks little in return, ideal for busy urban households seeking reliable seasonal colour. |
| Medium to large containers (40–50 litre and above) |
In roomy pots the compact root system and bushy top growth perform well with simple watering and feeding, letting you move colour to patios, balconies, or rented spaces without digging, appealing to city gardeners who value flexible, low-effort solutions. |
| Low-maintenance family garden beds |
Good resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust means little spraying or fuss, even in damp Irish summers with frequent showers and high humidity, reassuring hobby gardeners who prefer resilient, forgiving plants and dependable health. |
| Long-lived structural planting in mixed borders |
As an own-root rose it ages steadily, recovering better from winter setbacks and pruning than grafted plants, so once established it forms a durable, low framework that anchors mixed plantings, attractive for families wanting stable, long-term garden value. |
| Pollinator-supportive mixed bed with perennials |
Semi-double blooms offer partial access for insects, and when paired with nectar-rich partners like Echinacea, Gaura or Campanula they contribute to a more wildlife-aware planting that still looks neat, suiting nature-oriented, fragrance-indifferent garden owners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Ribbon – Plant a sinuous row along a gravel path, interspersed with Campanula persicifolia for soft spires and a romantic, rural feel – for Irish cottage gardeners who like relaxed formality.
- City-Edge – Line a Dublin terrace front wall with repeated plants at 25 cm, underplanted with low thyme for scent and weed suppression – for urban homeowners wanting crisp structure with little upkeep.
- Pink-Pocket – In a 50-litre terracotta pot, combine with trailing ivy and spring bulbs for year-round interest and summer pink focus – for balcony and doorstep gardeners with no ground to dig.
- Perennial-Weave – Thread small groups through drifts of Echinacea and Gaura, letting the compact mounds anchor taller, airy flowers – for nature-minded gardeners after subtle colour harmony.
- Entrance-Glow – Flank a front door with paired containers, echoing the pink tones with matching cushions or door paint – for busy families seeking a simple but coordinated welcome.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Polyantha bedding rose, registered as EVEpoldane, marketed as Gallerandaise Bedding rose EVEpoldane; grouped within Rósra bhláthchlóis, suitable for front borders and edging in domestic gardens. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Jérôme Rateau for Pépinières et Roseraies André Eve, France; bred in 2013 and introduced and registered in 2022, reflecting recent selection for modern, easy-care garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact, bushy shrub reaching about 30–50 cm high and 35–55 cm wide, with dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate thorns; forms low, rounded mounds ideal for edging and mass planting. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped blooms of 13–25 petals, small (1–4 cm) and carried in clusters on branching stems; remontant habit with abundant second and subsequent flushes across the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Buds open from dark, saturated pink to bright mid-pink (RHS 57C outer, 57B inner), then soften to pastel pink with subtle edge fading; overall effect is a vibrant, medium pink flowering display. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
No noticeable fragrance recorded; selected primarily for colour effect, compact form and garden reliability rather than scent, making it suitable where visual impact and easy care are higher priorities. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally poor due to semi-double, fuller flowers, though occasional small spherical orange-red hips of about 5–9 mm may form, adding minor late-season decorative interest in some seasons. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated resistant to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; winter hardy to around –21 to –18 °C (H7, USDA 6b, Swedish Zone 3), offering dependable performance in exposed and colder Irish garden sites. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions with reasonable drainage; spacing 25–45 cm depending on use, at 6.3–7.2 plants/m² for mass effect; suitable for beds, borders, low hedging and containers of at least 40–50 litres. |
Gallerandaise Bedding rose EVEpoldane offers compact, long-season pink flowering with strong disease resistance and durable own-root growth, an appealing choice if you would like a low-effort rose that quietly earns its place.