SCHERZO™ – red bedding floribunda rose – Meilland
In Irish cottage borders or neat Dublin front gardens, SCHERZO™ brings an easy, light-hearted playfulness to your beds with weeks of cherry-red colour that shrugs off rainfall and cool summers. This bushy, medium-height floribunda forms a lively hedge or low border, covering itself with semi-double clusters that open wide enough to offer moderate pollinator appeal. Own-root plants settle in reliably, building a strong framework for long lifespan and stable colour. Think of it as a gentle rhythm: roots in year one, shoots filling out year two, and full garden impact by year three, with very little fuss for the busy beginner gardener.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden bedding strip |
The bushy, upright habit and medium height let SCHERZO™ form a cheerful, easy-to-read line of colour along railings or low walls, ideal where you want a smart look from the street without complex pruning or staking, perfect for the time-pressed homeowner. |
| Informal cottage-style flower bed |
Continuous clusters of red blooms and moderately dense dark foliage fit beautifully among perennials and herbs, giving that relaxed cottage feel while remaining structured enough to manage in a small Irish garden, well suited to the nature-loving beginner. |
| Low rose hedge or path edging |
Recommended spacing for hedging allows plants to knit into a soft, flowering boundary, guiding you up the path with long-season colour and little more than an annual tidy-up, reassuring for busy urban gardeners. |
| Small family lawn island bed |
The floribunda’s season-long repeat flowering creates a bright focal clump in the middle of the lawn, remaining compact enough that children can still play around it safely, a practical choice for family-focused owners. |
| Mixed planting with perennials and grasses |
Semi-double, moderately pollinator-attractive flowers sit well with airy companions, providing both structure and nectar access while the stable, own-root framework carries the display reliably from year to year, appreciated by ecologically minded buyers. |
| Exposed, rainy suburban sites |
This variety maintains its colour and flower production in cool, wet summers when others may sulk, coping well where frequent showers and strong breezes meet heavy, moisture-holding soils, ideal for weather-conscious gardeners. |
| Large containers on patios or doorsteps |
In a 40–50 litre or larger pot with good drainage, its upright, bushy habit and repeat flowering give months of colour close to your seating area, providing impact with just watering and a light feed, attractive to low-maintenance beginners. |
| Long-term, low-fuss planting schemes |
Own-root plants gradually build a durable shrub framework that recovers well from winter damage and keeps its ornamental value with modest care, supporting medium maintenance schemes over many seasons, reassuring for forward-planning homeowners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Border Rhythm – Plant SCHERZO™ in loose drifts with sweet alyssum and clustered bellflower to echo traditional Irish cottage edges – ideal for romantic, nature-focused gardeners
- Terraced-Front Tidy – Create a single, low hedge along a rail or path for neat, repeated red accents – suited to city homeowners wanting order with minimal effort
- Patio-Focus Pot – Use one shrub in a 50-litre half-barrel with trailing alyssum to anchor a small seating area – perfect for balcony or courtyard beginners
- Lawn-Island Accent – Group three plants in a triangle in the lawn, underplanted with low groundcover, for an easy-to-mow family-friendly feature – good for busy households
- Pollinator-Soft Mix – Weave SCHERZO™ through airy grasses and bellflowers so its semi-double clusters add colour and moderate insect interest – appealing to wildlife-aware gardeners
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Bedding floribunda rose, exhibition shrub; registered as MEIpuma, marketed as Scherzo™ Bedding rose MEIpuma; ARS exhibition name Scherzo; name evokes playful, scherzo-like musical movement. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Marie-Louise Paolino Meilland, Meilland International, France; bred 1973, introduced 1975; parentage unknown; developed within the renowned Meilland floribunda breeding lines. |
| Awards and recognition |
Gold Medal, Belfast 1975, reflecting strong garden and trial performance under cool, maritime conditions, with reliable flowering and ornamental value noted by trial judges. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub 85–115 cm tall, 70–95 cm spread; moderately thorny shoots, moderately dense, slightly glossy dark green foliage; overall medium vigour with good structural stability. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double cup to chalice-shaped clusters, 13–25 petals per bloom; medium-sized flowers 4–7 cm, freely produced in trusses; remontant habit giving abundant second and subsequent flushes. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Closed buds dark red, velvety; freshly opened blooms intense scarlet red; mid-red at full bloom, then cherry red with pinkish highlights; maintains primary red tone as it ages, with good colour retention. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very faint fragrance, barely perceptible in normal garden conditions; grown mainly for its strong colour display and flower continuity rather than for scented garden or cut-flower use. |
| Hip characteristics |
Moderate crop of small, spherical hips; approximately 8–12 mm diameter; globular form; red RHS 43A; decorative in autumn without becoming overly dominant or messy on the plant. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7); average heat tolerance needing water in drought; resistant to black spot, moderate against powdery mildew and rust; regular checking still advisable. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun; spacing 55 cm in beds, 50 cm for hedges, 90 cm as specimen; density 3.2–3.7 plants/m²; suits flower beds and parks; medium maintenance, occasional plant protection beneficial. |
SCHERZO™ offers long-season red colour, reliable repeat flowering and enduring own-root strength, a considerate choice if you would like a lively yet undemanding rose in your garden.