RUMBA ® – yellow-red bedding floribunda rose - Poulsen
Bring a touch of cottage charm to your garden with Rumba, a compact floribunda that thrives in Irish conditions and shrugs off frequent showers and soft rain with ease. Its bushy, neat habit suits smaller front gardens and family borders, where the yellow-and-red blooms create a cheerful glow from early summer well into autumn. Own-root plants build strength steadily, rewarding you with a dependable, long-lived shrub whose colour stays vivid even in changeable weather. Flower clusters repeat generously, giving you a playful, “girly” border effect without complicated pruning or spraying. Mildly spicy fragrance and partly open centres offer gentle interest for visiting pollinators, while dense, glossy foliage keeps the plant looking fresh and well-dressed in every season. Think of the first year as root building, the second as shaping shoots, and the third as full, confident performance.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden beds along a terrace or townhouse |
Rumba’s compact, bushy habit and 65–95 cm height make it ideal for narrow beds where space is limited but you still want a generous display of colour. Its low maintenance and good disease resistance suit busy city lifestyles with limited gardening time, especially for the beginner. |
| Mixed cottage-style border in a family garden |
The vivid yellow-red clusters repeat through summer, bringing a lively cottage feel that pairs well with phlox and perennials. Own-root vigour means the shrub matures into a long-lived feature that copes well with typical Irish rainfall and soft, overcast light, reassuring the homeowner. |
| Mass planting in a front lawn island bed |
Recommended planting densities (around 4–5 plants/m²) allow you to carpet a small island bed with coordinated colour. The uniform, bushy growth and reliable repeat flowering give a showy effect with minimal upkeep, which appeals to the time-poor. |
| Low informal hedge along paths or driveways |
At 40 cm spacing, Rumba forms a low, colourful hedge that guides visitors and frames paths. The dense foliage and moderate prickliness deter trampling, while remontant flowering ensures interest over several months for the family. |
| Large containers on patios or balconies |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container with good drainage, Rumba offers long-season colour close to seating areas, even where soil is heavy clay or paved over. Its compact framework and mild fragrance make it easy to enjoy up close for the urbanite. |
| Rain-tolerant planting in exposed, damp gardens |
Dense, glossy foliage and proven disease resistance help Rumba stay attractive despite humid air and frequent drizzle, reducing the need for spraying or fuss. This resilience provides peace of mind where summers are cool, bright and softly wet for the pragmatist. |
| Pollinator-friendly family border with children in mind |
Double but partly open flowers offer some access to nectar and pollen, while bright colours help children spot visiting bees. As the plant strengthens from year one roots to year three fullness, it becomes a stable, educational feature for the nature-lover. |
| Long-term, low-intervention rose feature |
Own-root growth helps Rumba recover from winter damage or pruning mistakes, retaining its true variety and ornamental value over many years. Minimal spraying, simple deadheading and basic feeding keep it performing well, suiting the relaxed gardener. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-ribbon – Plant a loose ribbon of Rumba along a path, weaving between lavender and panicled phlox for a soft-focus, “girly” country look – ideal for romantic front-garden owners.
- Sunset-edge – Use Rumba as a low edging in front of taller shrubs, letting its yellow-red clusters echo warm evening light – suited to homeowners who want drama with little care.
- Terrace-jewel – Grow one or three plants in large clay pots, underplant with trailing thyme for scent and soft texture – perfect for balcony and terrace gardeners with limited soil.
- Family-circle – Create a small circular bed in the lawn with Rumba in the centre and bee-friendly perennials around, giving children a colourful pollinator spot – great for young families.
- Colour-wave – Mass three staggered rows in a sunny strip, spacing as advised, to form a low wave of coordinated blooms – ideal for those who like tidy structure without formality.
Technical cultivar profile
| Feature |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda bedding rose, registered as POUlrum, traded as Rumba ® FL Poulsen® Poulrum; exhibition floribunda class, part of the FL Poulsen® collection, ARS name ‘Rumba’. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Svend Poulsen, Poulsen Roser A/S, Denmark, in 1959 from ‘Masquerade’ × (‘Poulsen’s Bedder’ × ‘Floradora’); first introduced and distributed by Poulsen Roser A/S. |
| Awards and recognition |
Certificate of Merit and Trial Ground Certificate from the National Rose Society in 1959, plus a 2nd Certificate at the Concours de Roses Nouvelles in Madrid in 1960, confirming strong garden merit. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, compact shrub, about 65–95 cm high and 55–85 cm wide with dense, slightly glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickles; maintains a tidy outline suitable for edging and small beds. |
| Flower morphology |
Small, 1–4 cm double, cup-shaped blooms with 26–30 petals, carried in clusters; remontant with a plentiful second flush, giving repeated colour through the season when lightly deadheaded. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Golden-yellow base with crimson-red edging; buds deep orange with crimson tips, colours softening to pastel yellow and brick-red tones in strong sun; good colour retention, ARS RB, RHS 13A and 46A. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, restrained scent with a piquant, spicy character; not overpowering near seating or doors, but noticeable at close range on still days, adding a subtle sensory layer rather than a strong perfume. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate quantities of spherical orange-red hips, around 8–12 mm in diameter; they add late-season interest if spent flowers are not removed and can support wildlife-friendly planting schemes. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated resistant to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3), coping well with cool, damp climates when planted in well-drained soil. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, edging, mass planting, containers and parks; plant 40–75 cm apart depending on use, in moderately fertile, well-drained soil; tolerates partial shade and benefits from regular watering in drought. |
Rumba ® balances compact growth, repeat yellow-red flowering and reliable disease resistance with the long-term stability of an own-root plant, making it a thoughtful choice for relaxed, colourful Irish gardens.