P. S. DE LUXEMBOURG™ – purple climbing rose – Orard
If You dream of a cottage-style arch or Dublin terrace covered in velvety purple blooms, P. S. DE LUXEMBOURG™ gives You that romantic look with reassuringly low effort. This French-bred climber combines strong, spicy-sweet fragrance with generous, repeatedly opening flowers that keep the display going through our shorter Irish summers, even when days are grey and the air feels softly humid. Long, flexible canes make it easy to train over fences, pergolas or along a house wall, and its own-root nature supports a long garden life with steady, reliable regrowth. Give it a well-drained spot, add mulch to help heavy clay, and enjoy watching roots establish in year one, shoots build in year two, and the full show arrive by year three – an easy-going way to add richly coloured vertical structure and atmosphere. Ideal for turning small front gardens into welcoming, perfumed entrances and for creating a cheerful, rain-kissed walk beside the house where You can simply relax and breathe.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front-garden arch or porch entrance |
Strong, spicy-sweet scent and generous clusters of purple blooms create a welcoming entrance, while repeat flowering keeps the arch attractive for months with only light deadheading; well-suited to busy homeowners who love fragrance-focused beginners. |
| Irish cottage-style house wall |
Long, flexible canes and climbing habit make it easy to fan-train along a sunny or lightly shaded wall, giving a soft, traditional cottage look without complex pruning, perfect for those wanting romantic cover with modest effort homeowners. |
| Small urban terrace boundary or fence |
The tall, relatively narrow habit offers good vertical coverage without stealing ground space, ideal for screening along city fences or narrow side passages, providing colour and privacy for space-conscious yet style-aware urbanites. |
| Feature trellis in a family back garden |
Recurrent flowering and semi-double, showy blooms give reliable colour right through the season, while own-root resilience supports long-term structure, suiting families wanting a lasting focal point with minimal replacement needs for practical-minded gardeners. |
| Informal flowering hedge in larger plots |
Recommended spacings and strong vertical growth allow You to build a loose, flowering barrier, with moderate maintenance and a good balance between coverage and air-flow, fitting owners of slightly larger gardens seeking soft separation householders. |
| Mixed border with perennials |
Its cupped, violet-purple flowers combine beautifully with companions like lady’s mantle and Rudbeckia, while repeat blooming weaves colour through the border, appealing to those who enjoy relaxed, cottage-style planting schemes enthusiasts. |
| Climber for cooler, damp-prone locations |
Performs reliably in our soft, changeable weather where summer is short and rain frequent, as long as soil is reasonably drained and air can move, reassuring anyone gardening in typical Irish conditions and worried about reliability newcomers. |
| Large container on patio or terrace (40–50 L+) |
In a generously sized, well-drained container, this own-root climber provides vertical colour and scent for patios; with its long life and capacity to regenerate from the base, it rewards steady but simple care from time-poor, design-conscious residents. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Arch – Train over a simple metal arch with Alchemilla mollis at the base for a frothy, lime-green underplanting – for lovers of soft, romantic entrances.
- Dublin Terrace Screen – Run along railings or a boundary fence, partnered with upright lavender in containers – for city gardeners seeking privacy and perfume.
- Evening Scent Corner – Place by a seating nook with silvery Artemisia and white perennials to catch the spicy fragrance – for those who unwind outdoors after work.
- Family Hedge – Space plants as a loose, blooming divider, interplanted with Rudbeckia for late-summer colour – for families wanting gentle structure without harsh fencing.
- Vertical Pot Garden – Grow in a 50-litre half-barrel with trailing groundcovers spilling over the rim – for balcony and patio owners short on soil but rich in ideas.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Climbing, large-flowered shrub rose; registered as ORAfantanov, marketed as P. S. de Luxembourg™ climbing rose ORAfantanov, also known in exhibitions as Stormy Weather. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Pierre Orard in France from Heart ’n’ Soul × Rhapsody in Blue; introduced and registered in 2010 by Roseraies Orard and SAS R.O.S.E., breeding completed in 2006. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated: multiple 2007 medals including gold at Baden-Baden, Rome and Nagaoka, plus silver at Adelaide and Monza, with landscape and climber awards in Barcelona and Mesa, Arizona. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous climbing habit reaching about 260–380 cm high and 120–200 cm wide, with dense, matte, dark green foliage and moderate prickliness; self-cleaning is only partial, so some deadheading is useful. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cupped blooms 7–10 cm across, borne in clusters, with around 13–25 petals; remontant pattern gives a strong second flush and further waves when old flowers are removed and growth is supported. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep violet-purple inner petals with paler pastel undersides; buds open velvety purple, then fade toward lavender with silvery edges, colour lightening in strong sun; ARS code m, RHS 79A inner, 76D outer. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, long-lasting scent with a spicy-sweet character; highly noticeable near paths or seating areas, lending itself well to fragrant garden designs and evening enjoyment when air is still. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rosehips form only occasionally; when present they are small, spherical, about 8–12 mm across, in a warm orange-red shade, adding a subtle late-season accent rather than a main display. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4); disease resistance moderate to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, so site selection and basic hygiene are advisable. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, hedging and training on supports in sun or light shade; prefers fertile, well-drained soil, regular watering in dry spells, and occasional plant protection under high disease pressure. |
P. S. de Luxembourg™ rewards You with repeat purple blooms, strong fragrance and enduring own-root vigour on walls or arches, a considered choice if You’d like a long-lived, low-fuss climbing feature.