ZORBA™ – yellow climbing rose – Olesen & Olesen
If you dream of a soft, yellow glow welcoming you home, ZORBA™ Courtyard® brings cheerful colour and gentle fragrance to even a small Irish front garden without demanding fussy maintenance. This compact climbing rose clothes trellises, railings and pillars with neat clusters of golden blooms that refresh themselves thanks to good self-cleaning, so you spend more time enjoying than deadheading. Bred for consistent quality and style, its glossy dark foliage and medium-height growth give an ordered, “girly cottage” look while coping reliably with breezy, moist Irish weather and frequent showers bringing soft, cool light. As an own-root rose, it establishes steadily – think first year roots, second year shoots, third year full ornamental impact – then matures into a long-lived feature for your family garden.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Dublin terraced-house front railings or porch pillars |
Medium-height climbing growth makes it ideal for training along modest railings, arches or porch posts without overpowering a narrow path. In flower, it frames the entrance with a sunny, welcoming presence perfect for fragrance-loving city homeowners who are beginners. |
| Irish cottage garden trellis or arbour |
Reliable repeat flowering gives waves of yellow and peach-toned blooms across the short Irish summer, so your trellis stays cheerful rather than bare after the first flush. This steady performance suits those who want seasonal romance without complex pruning, especially time-pressed gardeners. |
| Compact garden pillar or obelisk in a small lawn |
Its controlled, 150–240 cm climbing habit allows you to create a vertical accent without shading the whole lawn or neighbouring borders. An obelisk wrapped in these small, cupped flowers becomes a gentle focal point for design-conscious families who enjoy relaxed outdoor living. |
| Own-root specimen beside a seating area |
Being grown on its own roots means it forms a stable, long-lived framework that regenerates well from the base if cut back by weather or mistakes, avoiding the issues of weak grafts. This resilience is reassuring for cautious home gardeners seeking lasting value. |
| Large container on patio or balcony (40–50 litre minimum) |
In a sufficiently large container with good drainage, its medium maintenance needs are simple: regular watering, a yearly feed and tying in new shoots. This makes vertical colour possible even where there is no soil border, ideal for urban households with paved spaces and limited time. |
| Mixed flower bed with soft cottage-style perennials |
Self-cleaning blooms mean spent petals fall away cleanly, helping beds look tidy without constant clipping. Underplant with airy perennials to catch the fallen petals and you still avoid a scruffy look, a boon for those who prefer relaxed planting but like a generally neat appearance. |
| Family garden boundary or low screen |
Dense, glossy foliage and moderate prickliness create a soft visual screen and a gentle deterrent without forming an impenetrable barrier. This suits family gardens where some privacy is welcome but visibility and easy access are still needed for children and pets and everyday use. |
| Pollinator-friendly corner with light shrub and perennial mix |
Although only moderately attractive to pollinators, its open double clusters still offer some interest, especially when combined with species such as scabious and feverfew that thrive alongside it in moist, cool Irish conditions with frequent light rain. This combination will appeal to nature-oriented, fragrance-loving buyers. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Arch – Train ZORBA™ over a narrow arch and underplant with feverfew and small scabious for a light, daisy-like froth – perfect for those wanting a romantic, low-effort welcome.
- Porch Pillar – Spiral it up a slim pillar or obelisk in a 50 litre pot by the front door for tidy, long-season colour – ideal for townhouses with limited beds but daily footfall.
- Soft Screen – Plant a loose row along a low fence to give gentle privacy while keeping good light and views – suited to family gardens that need definition without a heavy hedge.
- Girly Border – Mix its golden blooms with pink alpine catchfly and pastel perennials for an airy, feminine effect – great for those seeking a playful, “girly” cottage-garden feel.
- Sunny Seat – Place a trellis behind a bench and train the rose to frame the sitting area, where its mild scent can be enjoyed up close – ideal for evening relaxers with a cup of tea.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Climbing large-flowered rose, registered as POULyc008, marketed as Zorba™ Courtyard®, also known as Zorba; belongs to the Courtyard® collection of compact, exhibition-quality climbing and pillar roses. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in Denmark in 1992 by L. Pernille and Mogens N. Olesen for Poulsen Roser A/S from an unnamed seedling × ‘Aspen’; introduced after 2004, with US Plant Patent application filed in March 2004. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised in European rose trials: Bagatelle, Paris – Certificat de Mérite (2005); Hradec Králové – Honorable Approval (2006); The Hague – Recommendation Certificate (2007), confirming garden and exhibition merit. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Medium-height climbing habit, around 150–240 cm high and 70–120 cm wide, with dense, glossy dark-green foliage and moderate prickles; designed for trellises, pillars, arches and structured courtyard planting schemes. |
| Flower morphology |
Clusters of small, cupped, double blooms, roughly 1–4 cm across, bearing 25–30 petals; remontant with a generous second flowering period, and good self-cleaning as petals fall cleanly without persistent dead heads. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Golden-yellow flowers with delicate peach shading (ARS YB; RHS 14B, 22B), opening vivid then gently fading to creamy yellow with near cream-white edges and a soft peach veil, giving a harmonious, ever-changing colour display. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild yet noticeable scent with a soft, elegant character best appreciated at close range around seating areas or entrances; not overpowering, so it suits smaller gardens and front-door plantings where subtlety is preferred. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate numbers of small, ellipsoidal orange hips, around 10–15 mm, adding a quiet, decorative note in late season without dominating the plant or significantly impacting its flowering performance. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3); disease resistance medium for black spot, powdery mildew and rust, benefiting from good air movement and routine, preventative care where pressure is high. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions in well-drained but moisture-retentive soil; space 150 cm for mass plantings, 140 cm for hedging or 250 cm as a specimen, and use a 40–50 litre container minimum when grown in pots or tubs. |
ZORBA™ Courtyard® offers long-season golden blooms, a compact, easy-to-manage climbing habit and the durable reassurance of an own-root plant, making it a thoughtful choice for a relaxed yet refined Irish garden.