PRINCESS OF WALES – white bedding floribunda rose – Harkness
Step outside to a soft Irish drizzle and you can imagine PRINCESS OF WALES glowing in gentle light, its semi‑double flowers shimmering pure white with a hint of ivory at the heart. This floribunda is bred for reliable flowering right through the shorter summer, coping calmly with our moist air and frequent showers that would challenge fussier roses. Medium height and naturally bushy, it tucks neatly into a front garden or cottage border, creating a low, romantic hedge along paths or boundaries. Own‑root plants settle steadily, building a durable framework and roots that recover well after pruning or weather knock‑backs, giving you stable colour and shape year after year. The medium, softly sweet fragrance carries on damp evenings, while semi‑double blooms offer easier access for visiting pollinators. In a simple, practical rhythm – first season establishing roots, second season filling out with shoots, and by the third bringing full ornamental impact – this rose fits happily into busy families’ gardens with little fuss.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden edging for terraced houses |
The compact 65–95 cm height and 50–70 cm spread make a tidy, low line of white, ideal along paths or railings where space is limited. Semi-double blooms provide a neat, airy outline rather than a heavy hedge, suiting narrow Dublin front gardens and welcoming beginners. |
| Irish cottage-style mixed border |
Reliable repeat flowering keeps clear white highlights running through a border from early summer into autumn. The bushy habit and glossy, dark foliage give structure among looser perennials, while own-root robustness promises long-term presence for cottage-gardeners. |
| Relaxed low hedge between garden areas |
Recommended spacings of 35–40 cm allow you to create an informal, waist-high division between lawn, veg patch, or play area. Medium disease resistance suits average Irish conditions when combined with good air flow, reassuring homeowners. |
| Feature group in a small family lawn |
Plant 3–5 together at 40–65 cm to form a bright white “island” of bloom that reads well from windows and patios. The steady repeat display, without overly demanding maintenance, offers long-lasting value for busy families. |
| Large containers on patios and balconies |
In a 40–50 litre or larger pot with good drainage, the dense foliage and medium height create a generous, upright mound of white flowers. Own-root plants cope better with occasional drying or repotting, suiting time-pressed city-dwellers. |
| Pollinator-friendly white garden corner |
Semi-double, open blooms give easy access to stamens, supporting bees and hoverflies while maintaining a refined look. The medium, sweet fragrance adds another layer of sensory interest, ideal for nature-aware gardeners. |
| Low-maintenance family play garden |
Medium disease resistance, hardy to about -20 °C, and an own-root framework that regrows well after pruning help keep care simple; combined with resilience in our moist, changeable weather, it suits hands-off parents. |
| Memorial or tribute planting |
The pure white, delicately ivory-tinted flowers and connection to Princess Diana lend a thoughtful, commemorative feel. Steady, repeat flowering over the years mirrors its gradual establishment from roots to full ornamental effect, comforting reflective buyers. |
Styling ideas
- COTTAGE RIBBON – run a softly curving row along a gravel path, weaving between lavender and hardy geraniums for an easy, storybook Irish cottage look – for romantic border-lovers
- WHITE WELCOME – flank your front door with two large containers, underplanting with trailing ivy and white violas to echo the rose’s pure petals – for image-conscious homeowners
- MOONLIGHT PATCH – group three bushes in lawn with silver lamb’s ear and soft grasses, creating a pale evening focal point that glows in low light – for evening patio users
- POLLINATOR PARADE – mix with Gaillardia, Persicaria and herb fennel so bees move easily from the rose’s open blooms across a long, nectar-rich strip – for wildlife-minded families
- QUIET CORNER – combine with Hidcote hypericum and a simple wooden bench to form a calm, white-and-gold seating nook framed by gentle scent – for reflective garden-sitters
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda shrub rose, registered as HARdinkum; traded as PRINCESS OF WALES, Masterpiece Collection. ARS exhibition name Princess of Wales; Rósra bhláthchlóis type. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Robert B. Harkness, R. Harkness & Co. Ltd., United Kingdom. Parentage ‘Sexy Rexy’ × (‘Pearl Drift’ × ‘Autumn Fire’). Introduced and registered in 1997. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the RHS Award of Garden Merit (2002), indicating dependable performance, good garden value and stable characteristics under typical UK and Irish amateur conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, medium shrub of about 65–95 cm height and 50–70 cm spread, moderately thorny, with dense, dark green, glossy foliage giving a tidy, full appearance in beds or low hedges. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped clusters, typically 13–25 petals, flower size 4–7 cm. Remontant habit with a generous second flush and further repeats, carried in showy inflorescences. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure white overall with pale ivory or creamy tones in the throat; ARS W, RHS 155D outer, 11D inner. Colour holds well, only slightly lightening in heat; lightly translucent before fading. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength, softly sweet fragrance, noticeable at close quarters without being overpowering. Suitable near seating or entrances where a gentle, pleasant scent is appreciated. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms moderate quantities of small spherical hips, around 10–14 mm, in an attractive orange-red, adding subtle late-season ornamental interest if spent flowers are not removed. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated medium for black spot, powdery mildew and rust; benefits from good air circulation. Hardy to about -21 to -18 °C, corresponding roughly to USDA zone 6b, RHS H7, Swedish zone 3. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun and well-drained, improved clay or loam. Ideal spacings: 35–40 cm for hedges, 40 cm for mass, 65 cm solitary. Medium maintenance; occasional pest and disease checks advised. |
PRINCESS OF WALES offers repeat white flowering, gentle fragrance and durable own-root growth in ordinary Irish gardens, making it a thoughtful, long-lived choice if you wish to plant something graceful and reliable.