HEILIGE BILHILDIS – red bedding floribunda rose - Márk
In an Irish front garden or cottage border, HEILIGE BILHILDIS brings a sweep of vivid scarlet blooms that feel like a gentle, rain-fresh walk – cheerful, bright and relaxed. Its single, open flowers invite bees to visit, while the bushy, compact habit fits comfortably into small family gardens. Minimal deadheading is needed thanks to its naturally self-cleaning blooms, so You can enjoy colour rather than chores. Bred for reliable repeat flowering, it keeps producing clusters from early summer onwards, even when the weather is unsettled and summers are short. Own-root plants settle steadily and live for many seasons, offering dependable, long-term value. Think of it as a patient garden companion: first year for roots, second for leafy growth, third for full, glowing impact in Your beds and borders.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden bedding strip |
Compact, bushy growth to about 80–110 cm makes this rose ideal for a narrow front-garden strip along a path or low wall. Clusters of scarlet-red blooms stand out from the pavement and need little fussing, suiting time-pressed city homeowners who still want a welcoming entry for beginners. |
| Cottage-style mixed border |
Single flowers with exposed golden stamens are highly attractive to bees, linking beautifully with foxgloves, larkspur and catmint in a relaxed, wildlife-friendly border. It adds reliable colour without overwhelming other plants, perfect for nature-loving gardeners who value pollinator activity for families. |
| Mass planting in flower beds |
Regular repeat flowering and strong colour retention create a long, even display when planted in groups at 60 cm spacing. Square or hexagonal planting densities allow You to design neat, low-maintenance drifts that look professional yet are easy to care for, appealing to design-conscious home gardeners for impact. |
| Low informal hedge |
Its dense mid-green foliage and consistent height allow a soft, flowering hedge at about 50 cm spacing. This gives gentle structure along driveways or between front gardens, while remaining easy to trim and manage, ideal for neighbours wanting privacy without heavy-duty clipping for householders. |
| Rougher or urban conditions |
Good tolerance of heat and moderate drought makes it a sensible choice near tarmac, walls or driveways that heat up in summer. It copes well once established, needing only occasional watering in dry spells, which suits busy urban gardeners who cannot tend plants every day for commuters. |
| Irish clay-soil beds with improved drainage |
Once planted into well-prepared, free-draining soil, this own-root shrub builds strength steadily, rewarding You with more top growth and flowers each year; it thrives even where wet winters challenge other roses, provided drainage is improved for the typically damp, breezy Atlantic garden for planners. |
| Low-maintenance family garden border |
Self-cleaning single blooms fall away naturally, so deadheading becomes optional rather than urgent. Moderate disease resistance means only occasional checks for problems, fitting a realistic routine where children, pets and work already fill the week, ideal for those seeking colour without constant spraying for parents. |
| Large container on patio or terrace |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container, its bushy habit and moderate height give a bold but manageable patio feature. Repeat clusters of scarlet flowers brighten seating areas, while own-root vigour supports long life in the pot if watered and fed regularly, suiting balcony and terrace gardeners for urbanites. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Ribbon – weave HEILIGE BILHILDIS along a path with catmint and larkspur to echo a soft Irish cottage look – ideal for homeowners creating a storybook-style front garden.
- Bee-Lane – plant a double row as a low hedge under street trees, interplanted with pollinator-friendly perennials, to turn a bare verge into a buzzing corridor – perfect for nature-focused families.
- Scarlet-Drift – mass-plant in a curved bed by the driveway so the repeating red clusters read as one flowing ribbon of colour – suited to those wanting impact with simple maintenance.
- Patio-Jewel – place one rose in a large terracotta pot (50 litres plus) with trailing thyme at the rim for scent and texture – great for apartment or terraced-house gardeners.
- Green-Backdrop – set against clipped Lonicera nitida ‘Maigrün’ to contrast scarlet blooms with soft green structure – appealing to gardeners who like a tidy, designed look.
Technical cultivar profile
| Aspect |
Data |
| Name and registration |
HEILIGE BILHILDIS is a bedding floribunda shrub rose from the Rósra bhláthchlóis group, marketed as a consumer garden variety; trade name HEILIGE BILHILDIS Bedding rose Márk, own-root in 2-litre containers. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Márk Gergely in Hungary around 2000, distributed by PharmaRosa® Ltd.; exact parentage, registration and introduction year are not recorded, but selection focuses on decorative bedding performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, well-branched shrub to about 80–110 cm high and 60–90 cm wide, with dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickles; suitable for beds, borders, hedging and trained as a low standard. |
| Flower morphology |
Single, flat flowers with around 5–12 petals, medium-sized at 4–7 cm, borne in clusters; good repeat blooming with particularly abundant second flush, and naturally self-cleaning spent blooms. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure, vivid scarlet red (RHS 46A) from bud to full bloom, with only slight marginal darkening; yellow stamens contrast clearly. Colour retention is very good, giving a bright display throughout repeat cycles. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is delicate and very faint, with a lightly spicy character rather than a strong rose perfume; best appreciated close up, as this variety is selected more for colour, form and garden performance. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms bright red, globose hips, about 6–10 mm in diameter, in moderate quantities; these can add seasonal autumn interest and modest wildlife value if spent flowers are not removed after flowering. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about -26 to -23 °C (H7, USDA 5b, Swedish Zone 4); disease resistance is moderate to mildew, black spot and rust, generally coping if grown in sunny, airy sites with sensible basic care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun on well-drained soil; spacing: 60 cm for bedding, 50 cm for low hedges, 90 cm as specimen; medium maintenance, occasional pest and disease checks, container culture needs at least 40–50 litres. |
HEILIGE BILHILDIS offers long-season scarlet colour, bee-friendly single blooms and self-cleaning clusters on a durable own-root shrub; consider it if You would like reliable, easy structure and brightness in a modest family garden.