GRANDESSA – deep red climbing rose – Delbard
With GRANDESSA you can bring a romantic, storybook cottage mood to your family garden, creating a shady nook for afternoon tea beneath a rose-covered arbour. This Delbard-bred climber carries velvety, high-centred, deep-red blooms that repeat through the season, setting a dramatic backdrop against glossy dark foliage. Once established, its strong framework anchors reliably in breezier spots, even where gardens face regular rain and wind along more exposed coastlines. As an own-root plant in the pharmaROSA ORIGINAL 2-litre container, it settles quickly and is built for a long garden life, regenerating well from the base and keeping its ornamental value over time. Give it a simple support on a wall, fence, or arch and enjoy dependable flowering with only moderate care. In its first year it concentrates on roots, the second on stronger shoots, and by the third season you see its full character as a mature climber. Ideal for “girly”, English countryside borders, it pairs beautifully with pale perennials and a traditional kitchen-garden feel.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Pergola or arbour in a family garden |
Trained over a pergola or arbour, GRANDESSA quickly forms a leafy, flower-laced canopy that makes afternoon seating areas feel enclosed and cosy. Its moderate care needs suit those wanting romance without complex pruning, perfect for the busy homeowner. |
| Climbing rose on a sunny house wall |
On a south- or west-facing wall, its deep-red, high-centred blooms read clearly from a distance, adding classic structure and colour to typical brick or render. Own-root resilience helps it recover from occasional neglect, ideal for the time-pressed gardener. |
| Fence cover between neighbouring gardens |
Used along a boundary, its dense, glossy foliage and repeat flowers soften panel fencing while offering a gentle visual screen. The strong framework and good anchoring suit more exposed, rain- and wind-prone suburban plots, reassuring the family buyer. |
| Cottage-style rose border with perennials |
Grand, velvety blooms combine beautifully with soft pinks, whites and airy companions for a romantic cottage effect. Reliable repeat flowering through summer keeps borders lively without demanding intricate care, attractive for the cottage-style enthusiast. |
| Traditional kitchen garden entrance or arch |
Trained over an entrance arch into a kitchen garden, its rich colour frames views and lends a “storybook” feel. The own-root habit offers a long working life with simple renewal pruning, which suits the practical home grower. |
| Large container or half-barrel near a terrace |
In a 40–50 litre container with good drainage and a sturdy obelisk, GRANDESSA delivers vertical colour where borders are limited. Moderate feeding and watering are usually enough for steady growth, appealing to the small-garden owner. |
| Feature rose on a rustic trellis or screen |
Its height and strong, creeping habit make it effective on rustic trellis, turning plain structures into focal points. The long-lived own-root base means the trellis can be clothed for many seasons, a benefit valued by the long-term planner. |
| Showpiece near seating for evening enjoyment |
Placed by a terrace or bench, the velvety deep-red flowers and mild, pleasant fragrance are easy to appreciate at close range. The development arc from year 1 roots to year 3 fullness rewards patience, suiting the romantic gardener. |
Styling ideas
- Tea-Arbour Romance – Train GRANDESSA over a wooden arbour with underplanting of sweet alyssum to perfume the path, ideal for those who want a cosy, storybook tea corner – perfect for cottage-style fans.
- Kitchen-Garden Portal – Frame the entrance to a productive plot with a simple arch, pairing GRANDESSA’s deep red with soft pink Physostegia for a “girly” country feel – ideal for home veg growers.
- Coastal-Cottage Screen – Use along a trellis in breezier, rainier gardens, blending with blue Ceanothus for contrast and informal privacy – suited to exposed, small-plot homeowners.
- Patio-Column Glow – Grow in a 50-litre half-barrel with a metal obelisk, surrounding the base with lavender or herbs for scent – perfect for busy urban gardeners with limited beds.
- Evening-Reading Nook – Position beside a garden bench, let canes arch overhead and mix with pale foxgloves for twilight contrast – ideal for romantic readers seeking a quiet retreat.
Technical cultivar profile
| Feature |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Climbing rose GRANDESSA, registered as DELsire; trade name Grandessa Famille Delbard roses DELsire; ARS exhibition name Messire Delbard; large-flowered climber from the Famille Delbard collection. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Georges Delbard, France, 1976; introduced 1978 by Delbard. Complex parentage including Danse du Feu, Guinée, Ténor, Fugue, Delbard’s Orange Climber and Gloire de Dijon, selected for colour and climbing habit. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised in 1976 with prizes at Bagatelle and the Geneva International Rose Competition, reflecting its ornamental quality and performance as a climbing garden and exhibition rose. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Large-flowered climbing rose with creeping, vigorous growth reaching about 200–330 cm high and 120–200 cm wide. Dense, glossy dark green foliage and plentiful prickles create a robust, structural garden presence on supports. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, high-centred blooms with 26–39 petals, classic pointed-bud, cut-rose form. Flowers are mostly solitary on stems, with strong first flush and plentiful remontant second flowering for prolonged display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Velvety, uniform deep-red blooms with dark undertone; outer petals ruby red, inner deeper, buds blackish burgundy. Colour holds well before dulling to brownish burgundy with a matt surface and fine black edging on petals. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild but pleasantly noticeable fragrance suitable for seating areas and paths where close-up enjoyment is possible. Scent description is not fully characterised but contributes to a refined, classic climbing-rose atmosphere. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate quantities of spherical, bright red hips around 12–18 mm in diameter. Hips extend seasonal interest into autumn, adding small decorative accents among the foliage and on trained framework. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C, rated RHS H7, roughly USDA zone 5b and Swedish zone 4. Disease resistance moderate overall, with good black spot resistance and moderate susceptibility to powdery mildew and rust. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best planted in sun on pergolas, fences or walls, with 140–240 cm between plants depending on use. Requires medium maintenance with occasional plant protection and benefits from good soil preparation and support training. |
GRANDESSA combines velvety deep-red repeat flowering, strong climbing structure and long-lived own-root resilience, making it a dependable choice for creating a romantic arbour or wall display you will enjoy for many years; consider it if you favour classic cottage charm.