NINA WEIBULL® – dark red bedding floribunda rose
Imagine stepping outside for a few quiet minutes after rain, soft light on glossy foliage and clusters of deep red blooms giving a sense of gentle contentment. NINA WEIBULL® is a reliable floribunda for Irish cottage borders and compact Dublin fronts, coping well where soil can be heavy by simply improving drainage and adding mulch. Its own-root form means steady longevity, with roots establishing in year one, fuller shoots in year two and a rounded mass of flowers by year three. Semi-double blooms with open stamens support visiting pollinators, while the bushy, medium-height habit keeps beds looking naturally orderly without fuss. Self-cleaning flowers reduce deadheading, leaving more time to enjoy the rich, dark-red colour and bright hips that follow. Easy to plant, easy to live with, it brings low-maintenance romance to everyday family gardens.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden bed in a small city terrace |
Compact, bushy growth (around 80–110 cm tall, 50–70 cm wide) lets you create a generous look in a narrow strip without overwhelming the space. Reliable repeat flowering through the short Irish summer keeps entrances welcoming for passers-by and visitors seeking a cheerful approach, especially beginners. |
| Mixed Irish cottage border with perennials |
The semi-double, cluster-flowered blooms open their stamens, inviting bees and other beneficial insects, while repeat flushes keep colour coming between perennials. This supports a more natural, wildlife-friendly cottage style that still feels tidy enough beside paths for nature-lovers. |
| Small family lawn edge or play-area border |
Medium, bushy plants with good self-cleaning keep the border colourful but manageable, so you are not constantly deadheading beside busy family spaces. Own-root plants recover better if a stem is knocked, maintaining structure and flowers for curious children. |
| Low-maintenance, long-term planting in a front hedge line |
Planted at about 35 cm for hedging, the dense foliage and repeat-flowering habit form a neat, flower-rich line that screens low boundaries. Being on its own roots, the shrub can regenerate from the base over time, supporting a long-lived, dependable hedge for practical-minded homeowners. |
| Mass planting in a sunny bed |
With suggested densities of around 6 plants per m², you can achieve a carpet of dark-red colour that reads strongly even from the street. The consistent height and uniform flowering make maintenance simple, ideal for those who want impact from minimal ongoing work, especially busy-owners. |
| Roses in containers on patios or balconies |
In a 40–50 litre or larger planter with good drainage, NINA WEIBULL® offers season-long colour close to seating areas. Its moderate thorniness and medium height keep it practical in tight spaces, while own-root resilience makes repotting and long-term container life more forgiving for newcomers. |
| Clay-heavy garden beds improved for roses |
Where soils are heavier, mixing in grit and compost improves structure so roots can establish, after which the variety copes well with typical Irish wet spells and moderate summer heat. Once settled, its garden performance remains stable with modest care, reassuring less-confident gardeners. |
| Autumn-interest border for extended seasonal appeal |
If you leave some spent blooms, this rose forms bright red, spherical hips that add colour while flowers are still appearing, stretching the display into autumn. This quiet, long-season effect suits those who enjoy subtle changes outdoors over many months, particularly reflective walkers. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Ribbon – Plant an informal ribbon of NINA WEIBULL® along a path, weaving between clumps of garden iris and white verbena for a soft, storybook approach – ideal for romantic front-garden owners.
- Red-Carpet – Use close spacing in a sunny bed to create a solid swathe of dark-red blooms, backed with feather reed grass for movement – suited to those wanting strong impact with little upkeep.
- Doorstep-Welcome – Place one or two plants in large containers by the front door, underplanted with low herbs to soften the pot edge – perfect for urban dwellers with no real border space.
- Family-Frame – Edge a small lawn with a gentle curve of bushes, mixing in spring bulbs for early colour before the roses take over – good for young families enjoying play-friendly, pretty gardens.
- Wildlife-Strip – Combine this pollinator-friendly rose with verbena and ornamental grasses to form a buzzing strip that still looks tidy from the pavement – appealing to eco-conscious but time-poor gardeners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda shrub rose; registered as POUlwei, marketed as NINA WEIBULL® Floribunda POULSEN®. Belongs to the bedding floribunda group, suitable for Rósra bhláthchlóis and garden use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Svend Poulsen, Poulsen Roser A/S, Denmark, before 1961 from ‘Fanal’ × ‘Masquerade’; introduced and first distributed in 1961 by Poulsen Roser A/S. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recipient of the RJ Frizzell Award for Most Fragrant Rose at the Belfast Rose Trials in 2007, highlighting its proven garden performance in north-western European conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, medium-height shrub about 80–110 cm tall and 50–70 cm wide, with dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickliness; forms a full, rounded habit in appropriate spacing. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cupped flowers with 17–25 petals, medium-sized at 4–7 cm, produced in clusters. Remontant flowering with an initial flush followed by a second, equally abundant display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep, uniform dark red (ARS DR, RHS 53A–53B) from bud to full bloom, with velvety, slightly glossy petals; colour remains rich with minimal fading and a subtle wine-red tone at the edges. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak with a discreet rosy character; mainly grown for its reliable colour and floribunda effect rather than scent, making it unobtrusive near seating and doors. |
| Hip characteristics |
If blooms are not deadheaded, it sets decorative, spherical, bright red hips about 8–12 mm across in moderate numbers, adding extra autumn interest and seasonal structure. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated hardy to about −34 to −32 °C (USDA 4a, RHS H7), tolerating Irish winters easily. Disease resistance is medium, with typical susceptibility to black spot, mildew and rust in humid seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with improved, well-drained soil; water during prolonged droughts. Suitable for beds, borders, hedging and mass planting at 35–65 cm spacing, 5–7 plants per m² depending on layout. |
NINA WEIBULL® offers long-season dark-red colour, pollinator-friendly flowers and resilient own-root growth for years of reliable garden structure, making it a thoughtful choice if you seek an easy, enduring rose to plant now and enjoy maturing over time.