SPICE OF LIFE – orange bedding floribunda rose – Dickson
Bring a touch of Irish cottage charm to your front garden with Spice of Life: a floribunda that balances colour and reliability for small spaces where every shrub must earn its keep. Its warm orange, scarlet‑edged blooms glow in soft light, even on grey days with frequent rain and heavy soils where good drainage matters more than blazing sunshine. Clusters of semi‑double flowers appear in generous waves all summer, so your beds and borders feel consistently cheerful rather than bare between flushes. As an own‑root rose, it offers a reassuringly long lifespan, steady shape and the ability to regenerate if cut back hard or nipped by winter. Low maintenance by nature, it suits busy households who enjoy stepping outside to admire flowers, not to tackle endless chores. Over time it follows a natural rhythm – roots in year one, fuller shoots in year two, and by year three a settled, fully decorative presence that feels like part of the family. Ideal for narrow beds, paths and petite terraces that deserve a softly girly blush of colour with very little fuss.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden bedding strip along a path |
The bushy, upright habit and medium height let you line a narrow front path with bright, welcoming colour without overwhelming the space. Regular clusters of orange‑scarlet blooms create a neat, continuous edging ideal for everyday family entrances and busy homeowners. |
| Mixed cottage-style border in a family garden |
Its repeat flowering habit keeps colour coming in waves from early summer to autumn, bridging gaps between perennials and giving that relaxed, cottagey feel. The floribunda clusters read beautifully from a distance, suiting informal borders for nature‑oriented cottage‑garden beginners. |
| Low, colourful flowering hedge |
Planted at the recommended closer spacing, these roses knit into a low hedge with glossy dark foliage and glowing flowers. The semi‑double form and manageable height offer soft structure without feeling formal, perfect for defining front boundaries for style‑conscious neighbours. |
| Feature specimen near a seating area |
As a single specimen at slightly wider spacing, the warm colour change from scarlet‑orange to peach‑gold becomes a focal point at eye level. The subtle spicy scent is gentle rather than overpowering, suiting small patios and terraces used by fragrance‑loving urban gardeners. |
| Large container on terrace or balcony |
Its bushy, upright framework adapts well to a 40–50 litre pot with good drainage, giving renters or terrace owners a long‑lived rose that moves house with them. Own‑root resilience supports steady regrowth after pruning, ideal for mobile, time‑pressed city-dwellers. |
| Family play garden with low-maintenance planting |
High resistance to black spot, rust and powdery mildew means fewer sprays and less worry, even in showery, changeable Irish summers. This makes it a sound choice where children play and time is limited, reassuring busy, health‑conscious parents. |
| Long-term planting in heavy Irish soils |
Once established, the hardy shrub accepts typical Irish garden conditions, coping well where you improve drainage rather than recreate perfect soil. Its own‑root nature supports recovery if stems are damaged, suiting realistic, long‑view planners. |
| Colour accent in damp, wind-exposed gardens |
The foliage and bushy framework stand up well in open sites, giving dependable structure when weather is blustery with frequent showers and heavier ground underfoot. This steadiness supports simple, robust schemes for coastal‑influenced, low‑fuss garden owners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Edge – Run a low ribbon of Spice of Life along a front wall, backed with catmint and soft grasses for a hazy, storybook cottage effect – perfect for romantic, tradition‑minded householders.
- Terraced Glow – Plant one rose in a large 40–50 litre pot by your steps, underplanted with trailing thyme to soften the container rim – ideal for compact Dublin terraces and balconies.
- Girly Mix – Combine its warm orange blooms with pale pink perennials and white daisies for a playful, “girly” palette – suited to younger gardeners and anyone refreshing a front garden on a budget.
- Neighbourly Hedge – Create a low, friendly boundary hedge by repeating this rose at close spacing, underplanted with spring bulbs – great for sociable streets where kerb appeal and privacy both matter.
- Year-Round Anchor – Use a pair of shrubs as anchors in a small mixed border, weaving in seasonal cottage flowers around their steady green framework – ideal for busy owners wanting structure with minimal upkeep.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda bedding rose registered as DICcheeky, marketed as Spice of Life Bedding rose DICcheeky; exhibition floribunda / shrub rose within the Rósra bhláthchlóis commercial group. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Colin Dickson, Dickson Nurseries, from an unknown seedling × ‘Pathfinder’; raised in the UK, bred 2002, introduced and registered in 2004 via Dickson Nurseries Ltd. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised with Gold Medals at Belfast in 2006 and Dublin in 2006, indicating strong garden performance and ornamental value in Irish climatic conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub reaching about 85–115 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, moderately thorny, with moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage forming a tidy, balanced garden plant. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cupped floribunda blooms with 13–25 petals, medium size around 4–7 cm, borne in clustered inflorescences that provide a generous display across the plant. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Warm orange ground with vivid scarlet edge and pale lemon reverse; ARS OB, RHS 45A outer/11B inner; colour softens through gold and peach‑yellow tones as flowers mature on the plant. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak and only barely noticeable, with a subtle spicy character on close inspection; suitable where scent must be discreet rather than dominant near seating or windows. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasionally sets small, spherical hips about 6–10 mm in diameter, coloured orange‑red (RHS N34A), decorative in a modest way but not a primary feature of the cultivar. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated resistant to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3), coping well with typical Irish winters and humid summers. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny beds, borders or large containers; spacing 35–65 cm depending on use, with 5.7–6.6 plants/m² for massing; low maintenance needs but appreciates regular watering in prolonged dry spells. |
Spice of Life Bedding rose DICcheeky offers long-season colour, strong disease resistance and a steady, own-root temperament that rewards patient gardeners who would like a reliable, easy-care floribunda for everyday enjoyment.