TABOR™ – pink bedding floribunda rose
Walk out to your front garden after a shower and you will find TABOR™ glowing in the soft light – a compact floribunda that turns even a narrow Dublin terrace or small Irish cottage border into a place of quiet delight. Its medium‑deep pink, cup‑shaped blooms open in generous clusters, repeating in waves from early summer to autumn so your beds never feel bare, even when our summers are short and changeable. Bred for modern gardens, TABOR™ forms a neat, slightly glossy mound of foliage that stays pleasingly orderly and is easy to combine with grasses and airy perennials for a gentle, “girly” cottage look. On its own roots it settles in steadily and lives for years, giving dependable structure and colour with only modest care in typical Irish rainfall and heavy soil, as long as drainage is improved a little. Plant once and enjoy how it moves from establishing roots in the first year, to confident top growth in the second, and then full, lasting impact by the third. Lightly scented blooms, medium disease tolerance, compact habit and relaxed maintenance needs together make TABOR™ an inviting choice for everyday garden pleasure.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden bedding by the path |
TABOR™’s compact, rounded habit and medium height keep paths clear while filling the eye with neat, continuous clusters of pink from early summer to autumn, bringing reliable colour without crowding – ideal for busy homeowners. |
| Cottage-style mixed border |
The steady repeat flowering and soft pink tones weave easily among cottage perennials and grasses, creating a relaxed, feminine look that stays cohesive for years thanks to its own-root longevity – perfect for the romantic gardener. |
| Low flowering hedge along a drive |
Planted at hedge spacing, TABOR™ forms a low, structured line of bloom and foliage that reads clearly from the street, giving gentle privacy and a welcoming first impression with only medium‑level maintenance – suited to the image-conscious owner. |
| Small family lawn edge |
Along a lawn edge, the dense foliage and rounded outline create a soft green boundary, while flowers appear in regular flushes so there is always something to notice on quick trips outside between showers and shifting light – reassuring for the time-poor parent. |
| Feature planting in a large container |
In a 40–50 litre pot with good drainage, TABOR™’s compact structure and repeat flowering make a reliable patio focal point that settles in well on its own roots, coming back year after year with modest seasonal pruning – attractive for the balcony and patio gardener. |
| Urban terrace or small courtyard |
Where space is tight, its restrained spread and controlled height deliver a sense of greenery and bloom without dominating, while medium disease resistance copes well with close planting and Irish humidity – ideal for the city-based beginner. |
| Family play garden borders |
Moderate prickliness and compact growth help keep it manageable near play areas; blooms repeat, but the plant remains low enough not to block supervision lines, suiting relaxed gardens where looks and practicality must balance – made for the family-focused gardener. |
| Coastal-influenced suburban gardens |
Its neat, low centre of gravity and dense foliage stand up well in exposed, breezy sites where salt-laden Atlantic winds and frequent rain might trouble taller, looser shrubs, providing stable, long-term structure – reassuring for the weather-aware gardener. |
Styling ideas
- COTTAGE RIBBON – run a sinuous strip of TABOR™ along a path with Crocosmia for fiery highlights, using its compact habit and long flowering to anchor a soft, cottagey “girly” look – for relaxed front-garden stylists.
- PINK PILLOWS – group three plants near a seating area so their rounded shape and steady repeat blooms read as low cushions of colour through the season – for terrace loungers who want easy charm.
- BLUSH HEDGE – plant a short, low hedge at 35 cm intervals to frame a lawn, relying on its structured outline and own-root longevity for a stable, long-lived border edge – for planners of orderly family gardens.
- GRASSY WHISPERS – pair TABOR™ with Stipa tenuissima ‘Pony Tails’, letting the loose grass offset the compact rose mound and highlight its continuous flowering in moving light – for lovers of naturalistic textures.
- CONTAINER WELCOME – set a single plant in a 45 litre pot by the front door, where its slightly scented clusters repeat reliably and provide a friendly, low-effort greeting – for busy homeowners seeking instant polish.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda shrub rose from the Palace® collection; registered as POUlpal104, marketed as Tabor™ Palace® POUlpal104, a pink bedding floribunda suited to flower beds and smaller garden spaces. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in Denmark in 2021 by L. Pernille and Mogens Nyegaard Olesen for Poulsen Roser A/S; introduced after 2022 as a compact, modern floribunda for ornamental garden use. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact, rounded shrub 45–75 cm tall with a 40–60 cm spread; dense, slightly glossy yellow‑green foliage and moderate prickles create a tidy, medium-textured shrub for beds and borders. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, cup-shaped flowers with 40+ petals, medium-sized at 4–7 cm, borne in clusters; remontant habit with a strong second flush and reliable repeat flowering through the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Uniform medium-deep pink, RHS 66B outer and 68A inner; buds deep pink with a cool tinge, lightening to pastel edges as blooms open, with a gentle overall fading as flowers age. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, restrained fragrance with a slightly sweet, classic rosy character; scented enough for close enjoyment near paths or seating, but not overpowering in smaller urban or courtyard gardens. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose hips are scarce and only occasionally produced; small spherical orange-red hips around 5–8 mm can appear sporadically, adding subtle late-season interest without heavy seeding. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Medium resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; hardy to about –21 to –18 °C (H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3), coping well with typical Irish winters and damp, cool conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Space at 45 cm for bedding, 35 cm for hedges, 70 cm as specimen; allow 4.9–5.7 plants/m² in mass plantings and ensure well-drained soil, especially in heavier clays and wetter gardens. |
TABOR™ Palace® POUlpal104 offers compact structure, long repeat flowering and dependable own-root longevity, making it a thoughtful choice for those planning a lasting, low-fuss rose feature.