ALISON™ 2000 – golden-orange bedding floribunda rose – Liebig
Imagine afternoon tea framed by golden clusters of ALISON™ 2000, a compact floribunda that slips easily into cottage-style borders and thrives even where gardens are exposed to coastal breezes and frequent rain. Its bushy, compact habit and dense, glossy foliage create a neat, low hedge or generous bedding patch without dominating a smaller family plot. Semi-double blooms repeat reliably from early summer, giving a long season of colour that gently shifts from vivid golden-orange through peach and pink to creamy yellow, lending a soft, storybook romance to paths, kitchen gardens and play-space edges. Grown on its own roots, this established 2‑litre plant is built for a long, steady life in your soil, quietly regenerating from the base so you spend more time enjoying it and less on tricky maintenance. With medium disease resistance and a naturally tidy outline, routine care is straightforward, and in a large 40–50 litre pot this variety anchors patios or front doors just as confidently as it fills a flowerbed, making it an easy, dependable choice for busy households seeking low-fuss beauty and relaxed, cottage-garden charm.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front of cottage-style flowerbed |
The bushy, compact growth and 40–65 cm height make ALISON™ 2000 ideal for the front of borders where you want reliable flowering without blocking views. Repeating semi-double clusters keep colour coming through the season, softening edging lines for romantic cottage-garden lovers. |
| Low informal hedge along a path |
Planted at 35–45 cm spacings, the dense, glossy foliage knits into a low hedge that guides paths and frames lawns without heavy pruning. The changing golden-orange to peach tones create movement and warmth, while own-root strength supports long-term structure for traditional front-garden owners. |
| Mixed cottage border with perennials |
Its medium maintenance needs and medium disease resistance suit busy gardeners who still want a classic mixed border. The golden-orange flowers pair well with blues and whites, while the semi-double form offers moderate interest to bees, blending ornament with wildlife value for pollinator-conscious families. |
| Raised bed on heavy or clay soil |
Compact roots and moderate vigour adapt well to raised beds above heavier soils, helping manage winter wet and improve drainage where clay dominates. The stable, low habit makes it less prone to wind rock, particularly useful in smaller, exposed gardens for clay-soil homeowners. |
| Large container on terrace or balcony |
In a 40–50 litre container, its compact size and bushy outline create a generous yet manageable display for terraces or balconies. Regular repeat flowering brings cottage colour close to seating areas, with simple seasonal pruning and feeding suiting busy urban gardeners. |
| Family play garden edges |
At under 70 cm, this rose defines play-lawn edges without becoming too tall or sprawling. Medium prickliness discourages trampling while still being easy to work around, and the long flowering season adds gentle colour near everyday activity for practical family buyers. |
| Kitchen garden and cutting corner |
The remontant habit and clustered stems provide a steady trickle of stems for small jugs indoors, while golden-orange to peach shades blend with home-grown produce colours. Own-root resilience supports many years of cropping-friendly display for home-grower enthusiasts. |
| Small front garden focal group |
A trio or small drift near the front door gives a strong visual welcome, even in sites open to wind and frequent rain, thanks to compact stature and anchoring habit that cope with exposed conditions, offering dependable charm with modest care for time-poor beginners. |
Styling ideas
- Kitchen-border sweep – Plant a loose row of ALISON™ 2000 along vegetable beds, interlaced with chives and marigolds, to blur the line between ornamental and productive spaces – ideal for relaxed kitchen-garden keepers.
- Peach-and-blue drift – Combine with blue globe thistle and airy grasses so the warm golden-orange flowers fade through peach against cool blues, creating a soft, naturalistic ribbon – suited to lovers of painterly borders.
- Front-gate welcome – Cluster three roses by the gate with a backdrop of clipped Ilex crenata, giving a tidy evergreen frame to ever-changing flower colours – perfect for homeowners wanting order with romance.
- Patio-tea corner – Grow one plant in a 40–50 litre clay pot beside a small table, underplanted with trailing thyme, to bring fragrance and colour right to your chair – designed for balcony and terrace relaxers.
- Pollinator-friendly patch – Mass-plant ALISON™ 2000 with Japanese anemones behind to extend late-season interest, creating a soft, nectar-offering corner without complex upkeep – ideal for wildlife-minded families.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
ALISON™ 2000 is a floribunda bedding shrub rose from the Bed rose group; ARS exhibition name Alison 2000, bred by Ewald Liebig and marketed as a consumer garden rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in Germany around 2000 by Ewald Liebig, with parentage unknown; introduced to the market by Pflanzen-Kontor and supplied here as an own-root, container-grown garden rose. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact, bushy rose reaching around 40–65 cm in height and 40–60 cm spread, with dense, dark glossy foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a neat, low, bedding or edging shrub. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped flowers of medium size borne in clusters, typically with 13–25 petals; remontant habit ensures a good initial flush followed by an equally abundant second flush. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep golden-orange base with bronzy tinge; buds golden-yellow to orange, opening vivid, then fading through peach and pink to creamy yellow, providing a dynamic colour range across the season. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Light, delicate scent with a mild overall strength; semi-double flowers and accessible stamens offer moderate appeal to visiting pollinators in suitable garden conditions. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderately abundant, spherical orange-red hips about 7–10 mm across, adding subtle late-season interest if spent flowers are left unpruned after the main flowering period. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H6), with resistance to powdery mildew and black spot, but only medium resistance to rust, where occasional fungicide may be advisable. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, borders, parks and high-stem use; plant at 35–45 cm for hedging or massing; medium maintenance with simple annual pruning and standard feeding for reliable flowering. |
ALISON™ 2000 offers compact habit, long-season golden-orange flowering and dependable own-root longevity, making it a thoughtful choice for welcoming cottage-style colour into everyday family gardens.