OLIVERA™ – pale yellow bedding floribunda rose
Imagine a soft Irish drizzle brightening your front garden as OLIVERA opens clusters of buttery, pale-yellow blooms that gently fade to cream. This compact, bushy shrub keeps flowering in generous flushes all season, bringing reliable colour even when summers are short and skies are mixed with showers and sea-breeze air. Its mild tea fragrance gives a light, comforting note rather than overwhelming perfume, ideal beside paths and cottage-style beds. Grown on its own roots, it establishes steadily in your soil, showing its full charm as roots settle in year one, top growth builds in year two and the rose reaches its lasting garden impact by year three.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden feature near the door |
The compact, bushy habit and medium height make Olivera™ easy to place by a front path or doorway without blocking windows or views, while repeat flushes of pale-yellow flowers keep the entrance bright and welcoming for busy homeowners. |
| Low cottage-garden border |
Its pastel, cream-yellow flowers and dense foliage suit an informal, “girly” cottage look, pairing beautifully with airy verbena or yarrow, and its own-root stamina helps the planting mature into a long-lived, coherent border for romantic gardeners. |
| Small bedding groups in family gardens |
Regular remontant flowering and reliable colour retention mean clustered plants create a soft, luminous patch of colour through the season, giving plenty of visual reward without demanding complex care from beginner gardeners. |
| Low informal flowering hedge |
Recommended hedge spacings allow Olivera™ to knit into a neat, shoulder-height line, and its mid-green, slightly glossy foliage provides structure long after blooms fade, offering gentle separation of spaces for family garden owners. |
| Patio containers and large pots |
The compact structure performs well in substantial containers of at least 40–50 litres, where good drainage and mulching help manage heavier Irish soils, giving flexible placement options on patios and terraces for urban residents. |
| Mixed planting with shrubs and perennials |
Its medium maintenance level fits easily into mixed borders: occasional deadheading and basic plant protection keep it healthy among companions like dwarf barberry, without overshadowing them, suiting time-poor gardeners. |
| Family-friendly play-area edge |
Moderate prickliness and compact size make this shrub easier to position at the edge of lawns or play areas, offering flowers close to eye level while remaining manageable and tidy for young families. |
| Resilient own-root planting in Irish conditions |
Grown on its own roots, Olivera™ settles steadily, coping well as it gradually adapts to damp, rain-washed air often touched by Atlantic winds, giving you a dependable shrub that regrows strongly from its own base for long-term planners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Charm – Drift Olivera™ along a picket fence with Achillea and catmint for a soft, old-fashioned cottage feel – ideal for nostalgic, nature-minded gardeners
- Pastel Terrace – Plant one rose per large pot with silvery festuca and white alyssum to frame a small patio – perfect for Dublin terrace and balcony owners
- Soft Hedge – Use close spacing to create a low, pale-yellow flowering hedge, underplanted with groundcover thyme – suited to families wanting gentle structure
- Front-Door Welcome – Combine Olivera™ with dwarf barberry and evergreen box balls near the entrance for year-round form and seasonal bloom – for design-conscious homeowners
- Meadow Edge – Tuck small groups into a loose tapestry of grasses and Verbena bonariensis for a light, romantic border – appealing to relaxed, wildlife-leaning gardeners
Technical cultivar profile
| Attribute | Data |
| Name and registration |
Olivera™ Frayla® BOZolivfra; floribunda shrub bedding rose in the Frayla® collection, commercial group “Rósra bhláthchlóis”, registered as BOZolivfra in 2016 for garden use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Biljana Božanić Tanjga for Pheno Geno Roses, with unknown parentage; introduced and first distributed in 2016 by Pheno Geno Roses (Netherlands) for European gardens. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact, bushy dwarf shrub, around 50–75 cm high and 40–60 cm wide; dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage with moderate prickles, forming tidy, rounded plants for beds and pots. |
| Flower morphology |
Clustered, double, cup-shaped blooms with 26–39 petals, medium-sized at 4–7 cm; remontant with a plentiful second flowering, though weakly self-cleaning and benefits from deadheading. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pale yellow, ARS LY; RHS 4D outer, 11D inner; buds light lemon-yellow, opening buttery-yellow then fading to cream and off-white edges, with very good colour retention and soft pastel effect. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, pleasant tea scent that is noticeable at close range without dominating nearby seating areas; primarily an ornamental variety with flowers bred for colour and form rather than perfume strength. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional bright red, spherical hips, 12–16 mm diameter, forming decorative late-season accents when spent flowers are left on the plant rather than removed for continuous flowering. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about -21 to -18 °C (H7, USDA 6b, Swedish Zon 3); disease profile: resistant to black spot, moderate susceptibility to powdery mildew and rust, generally sound with sensible care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Use in beds, hedges or large pots; medium maintenance with some spray use; plant 30–55 cm apart, 8.2–9.4 per m²; provide decent drainage in heavy clay and mulch to stabilise moisture and growth. |
OLIVERA™ offers compact pastel flowering, repeat blooms and reliable hardiness on its own roots, giving a long-lived, easy-going shrub rose that we would warmly recommend considering for your garden.