RALLY AMORINA – red landscape shrub rose – Kraan
If you would like a joyful, low-fuss rose for a small Irish front garden or cottage-style border, RALLY AMORINA gives you waves of bright, cherry-red single blooms that invite bees even during cool, damp spells and humidity-laden summers. This compact, bushy shrub settles quickly into heavy garden soils when you give it decent drainage and a simple mulch, rewarding you with self-cleaning flowers, neat foliage and excellent disease resistance. As an own-root plant, it offers reassuring longevity, rebuilding itself from the base if damaged and keeping a stable shape over the years. Once planted, maintenance stays pleasantly simple: no deadheading is needed, pruning is light, and it tolerates partial shade in narrow Dublin terraces. The long flowering season brings a feeling of relaxed cheerfulness to everyday walks past the front gate, with colour that holds well in wind and rain. In a larger border or low hedge it forms an easy-care red ribbon of bloom, moving from Year 1 roots to Year 2 top growth and full garden presence by Year 3.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Family front garden hedge |
Compact, bushy growth and repeat flowering create a low, welcoming hedge that stays tidy without constant clipping. The self-cleaning blooms drop on their own, so there is little mess beside paths or drives, even for a busy homeowner. |
| Small Irish cottage border |
Its moderate height and dense foliage fit perfectly into narrow cottage beds, bringing long-lasting red colour amongst perennials. The own-root form builds strength year by year, ideal for long-term planting plans valued by the thoughtful gardener. |
| Dublin terraced-house front garden |
The rose thrives in partial shade and copes well with urban air and reflected heat from pavements. Reliable disease resistance keeps foliage fresh in closely packed streets, which is reassuring for the time-pressed city dweller. |
| Low-maintenance pollinator strip |
Single to semi-double flowers with exposed stamens provide easy nectar access for bees over a long season. Little pruning or deadheading is required, making it a wildlife-supporting choice for the nature-minded beginner. |
| Mass planting in clay-based beds |
The variety forms an even, ground-covering carpet of foliage and colour when planted at the recommended density. It is particularly valuable in wetter gardens where it tolerates cool summers with frequent showers and persistent air moisture cherished by the Irish gardener. |
| Informal mixed shrub border |
RALLY AMORINA weaves a ribbon of red through other shrubs, its compact habit avoiding gaps while leaving room for companions. The long flowering period offers dependable structure and colour for the design-conscious planner. |
| Large patio container (40–50 litres) |
In a generous container it becomes a bright focal shrub with minimal ongoing care, needing only regular watering and an annual feed. Own-root growth helps it recover well if you are occasionally away, suiting the travelling owner. |
| Children’s play-area edge |
The low, bushy habit frames lawns or play spaces with cheerful colour while avoiding tall, towering stems. Good disease resistance and modest maintenance mean fewer tasks around active youngsters, which suits the busy family. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Ribbon – run a loose line of RALLY AMORINA along a path, softened with Lychnis alpina ‘Magenta’ and airy grasses for a playful, old-fashioned cottage look – ideal for romantic front-garden enthusiasts
- Urban-Red – pair with dwarf wintercreeper and simple gravel mulch in a small city forecourt for a crisp, low-care design – suited to style-aware town-house owners
- Family-Edge – create a low edging hedge around a lawn, mixing in spring bulbs for extra seasonal sparkle – perfect for young families wanting year-round interest
- Terrace-Pot – plant one shrub in a 40–50 litre pot with trailing thyme at the rim for colour and scent near the door – great for balcony and patio gardeners
- Wildlife-Drift – use generous drifts of RALLY AMORINA with pollinator-friendly perennials to form an informal, bee-supporting corner – appealing to nature-focused homeowners
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Modern landscape shrub rose, registered as BOKRAPOLO, marketed as Rally Amorina within the Amorina collection, also exhibited under the name Rally in shrub classes. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Jan Kees Kraan for Boot & Co in Boskoop, Netherlands, introduced from 2008 in several European markets by Boot & Dart B.V. and De Ruiter Innovations. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds ADR certification for garden performance, plus multiple international show honours including Excellence Rose and Toproos awards from The Hague and a silver medal from Kortrijk. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact, bushy shrub reaching about 40–60 cm in both height and spread, with dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a cohesive, low-maintenance mass. |
| Flower morphology |
Bears flat, single to semi-double cluster blooms, typically 5–12 petals, around 4–7 cm across, produced repeatedly in abundant flushes from early summer into autumn on short flowering stems. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Flowers open velvety dark red, shift to vivid scarlet with paler edges, then fade towards cherry and raspberry red, maintaining a rich red appearance with subtle purple tones and good colour retention. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak and barely noticeable, so it is chosen primarily for dependable colour, form and garden performance rather than scent, an advantage where neutral fragrance is preferred. |
| Hip characteristics |
Develops modest numbers of small, spherical orange-red hips, roughly 6–10 mm in diameter, adding a touch of seasonal interest but not considered a major ornamental feature of the variety. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7 and hardy to about −23 to −21 °C, with proven resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, plus good tolerance of urban conditions, heat and moderate drought once established. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, edging, low hedges and large containers; space at 30–55 cm depending on use, plant in well-drained soil, mulch annually, and prune lightly to maintain shape and flowering density. |
RALLY AMORINA offers disease-resistant, long-flowering red colour on a compact, own-root shrub that will settle in for many years; an excellent option to consider if you value easy structure and dependable bloom.