CITY OF CARLSBAD™ – orange-white bedding floribunda rose - Carruth
With its softly variegated orange and cream blooms, CITY OF CARLSBAD™ offers a naturally romantic focus for an English-style family garden, especially where you want relaxed cottage planting that still feels carefully composed. The semi-double flowers open wide to reveal golden stamens, bringing a touch of biodiversity as visiting insects explore the lightly apple-scented centres. On its own roots, this bushy, medium-height floribunda develops into a stable, long-lived feature that can be refreshed by simple pruning and occasional renewal, even in breezier gardens where good anchoring helps in persistent coastal winds. Easy to combine with ornamental grasses and low hedging, it slips into existing borders with a balanced look and suits gardeners who prefer straightforward, seasonal routines to constant fussing. In a 40–50 litre or larger container, the dense foliage and patterned blooms create a portable focal point that matures steadily from a well-rooted young plant into a rounded, flowering structure.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front-of-border cottage bedding strip |
Compact, bushy growth and semi-double orange-and-cream blooms create a soft, storybook ribbon in front of taller shrubs or perennials, ideal for informal cottage-style layouts where colour and pattern are the main focus for beginners. |
| Informal low hedge along paths |
Regularly spaced plants at around 55–60 cm form a loosely knitted, flowering line that guides you through the garden without feeling rigid, with own-root plants regenerating well after pruning or accidental damage for family users. |
| Feature rose in a large container |
In a 40–50 litre or larger pot, its medium height, dense foliage and eye-catching bicolour flowers create a movable focal point for patios or small urban gardens, suiting those short on space but keen on characterful planting for balconies. |
| Mixed planting with ornamental grasses |
The proportional, rounded habit pairs naturally with upright grasses, allowing the striped flowers and airy seed-heads to weave together into a relaxed, textural picture that needs only simple seasonal tidying for time-poor gardeners. |
| Pollinator-friendly corner near seating |
Semi-double, open-centred blooms offer accessible nectar and pollen, while the light apple fragrance and repeating flushes of colour bring gentle movement and interest around benches or arbours for wildlife-conscious owners. |
| Raised bed on heavier clay soil |
Planting in a well-drained, raised bed helps roots establish securely and cope better with wet winters, providing a more reliable framework of flowering stems in gardens where heavy soil can otherwise limit rose choice for clay plots. |
| Small group planting in sunny front gardens |
Groups of three to five plants create a generous show from a modest footprint, building up into a consistent, patterned display that welcomes visitors and matures into a familiar, long-lived presence for traditional-minded homeowners. |
| Part-shade border with afternoon light |
This rose tolerates partial shade, performing well where it receives several hours of softer sun, making it suitable for side gardens or spots screened by neighbouring buildings in wind-aware sites where secure anchoring matters for coastal gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Kitchen-border charm – Thread CITY OF CARLSBAD™ between herbs and low vegetables, using its patterned blooms to soften practical beds – ideal for cooks who like a pretty, productive plot.
- Grass-and-rose drift – Combine small groups with feather reed grass and switchgrass for a breezy, meadow-like ribbon – suited to gardeners who enjoy movement and naturalistic planting.
- Pathway storybook edge – Line a front path with repeated plants and a backing of Lonicera nitida for a neat yet romantic entrance – perfect for families wanting classic kerb appeal.
- Patio focal pot – Grow a single shrub in a generous 50 litre terracotta pot with trailing thyme at the base – for balcony and terrace owners needing portable colour.
- Arbour tea-corner – Flank an arbour or bench with small clusters, underplanting with lavender and catmint to create a scented, cottage-style seating nook – appealing to afternoon-tea lovers.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic | Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda bedding rose, registered as WEKtorcent; marketed as CITY OF CARLSBAD™. Belongs to the bed rose group and classified as an exhibition floribunda shrub rose for garden and show use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Tom Carruth in the United States from ‘Rosy Outlook’ × ‘Scentimental’. Introduced and initially distributed by Weeks Wholesale Rose Grower, Inc. in 2003 after breeding work completed in 2000. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, well-branched shrub reaching about 85–115 cm in height with a 75–105 cm spread. Dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickliness give good visual presence and fill in gaps effectively. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, flat blooms with 13–25 petals, produced in clusters. Large flower size, around 7–10 cm across, with remontant habit and a particularly plentiful second flush providing repeat colour through the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vivid orange background with irregular white stripes and spots; ARS code ob, RHS 40A outer, 155D inner. Colours deepen slightly then fade to salmon and cream as blooms age, giving a changing, painterly effect over time. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, light apple-scented fragrance that is noticeable at close range without dominating nearby plantings. Suits seating areas where a gentle scent is preferred over intense perfume, adding refinement rather than strong impact. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces small, spherical orange-red hips about 8–12 mm in diameter in moderate quantities, extending ornamental interest into autumn and providing additional seasonal texture once the main flowering period has passed. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3, USDA 6b). Requires attentive disease management, as it is very sensitive to black spot and powdery mildew and moderately susceptible to rust in humid conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions with fertile, well-drained soil and routine watering in dry spells. Needs regular preventive fungicide treatments, good air circulation and removal of infected leaves to maintain foliage quality and long-term vigour. |
CITY OF CARLSBAD™ offers patterned cottage charm, pollinator-friendly semi-double blooms and adaptable border or container use on a reliable own-root framework; a thoughtful choice if you enjoy characterful roses with long-term presence.