PATRAS™ – red bedding floribunda rose – Olesen & Olesen
Bring an air of storybook romance to your garden with PATRAS™, a compact floribunda that settles happily into small, everyday spaces while coping reliably with brisk winds and showers in exposed British plots. Its low, bushy habit forms a neat edging or front-of-border line, ideal for framing paths, vegetable beds or a cottage-style sitting area. Clusters of vivid red blooms appear again and again through the season, giving dependable colour without complicated pruning or fussy feeding routines. The flowers open from deep red buds into a uniform, glowing red, creating a cosy, afternoon-tea-under-the-arbour atmosphere even in modest family gardens. Mild, sweet fragrance and glossy mid-green foliage complete the picture, while the own-root form supports long-term resilience and easy recovery after harsh winters. Over the first few seasons its roots, then shoots, then full flowering display mature gradually into lasting cottage-garden charm.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Low cottage-style front-of-border |
The compact, bushy framework and modest height make this rose ideal for edging mixed borders in smaller family gardens, where it stays in scale with perennials and herbs yet gives strong, repeat red flowering at eye-catching path level for the cottage-style homeowner. |
| Traditional bedding and parterre layouts |
As a bedding floribunda it excels in formal blocks or parterre beds, with regular spacing creating an even carpet of colour; medium maintenance needs suit gardeners who want order and structure, but without demanding daily attention, particularly appealing to the busy. |
| Patio containers and roof terraces |
The naturally low, dense habit adapts well to large containers of at least 40–50 litres, anchoring safely even in breezier, more exposed spots, while own-root vigour helps it re-sprout strongly if winter or wind damage occurs, reassuring for cautious balcony and terrace beginners. |
| Edging along kitchen garden paths |
Short, sturdy shoots and mid-green glossy foliage form a neat living boundary between productive beds and lawn, giving an old-fashioned kitchen-garden feel; repeat flushes of red clusters add warmth and charm for families who like a practical yet pretty allotment. |
| Small informal hedging or low divider |
Planted at recommended hedging distances, the dense foliage and steady branching knit together to form a soft, low divider between play areas, seating and vegetable plots, providing structure without looking severe and suiting those who value gentle, traditional gardens. |
| Mixed cottage borders with perennials |
The medium-sized, cup-shaped flowers and uniform red colour combine easily with pinks, purples and silvers from companion plants, giving a long-season focal point that does not overwhelm neighbours, ideal for romantic, English-country schemes favoured by cottage-garden enthusiasts. |
| Cooler and coastal-climate family gardens |
Good winter hardiness and a stable, low centre of gravity help it cope with blustery, damp sites typical of many British gardens, so flowering remains dependable even where weather is unsettled, suiting coastal and cooler-region households. |
| Long-term, easy-care family planting |
The own-root form supports gradual thickening of the base and long lifespan, so after the first seasons of establishing roots and framework, it rewards you with reliable, repeating bloom displays year after year, a sensible choice for time-pressed family gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Red Edging – Run a low line of PATRAS™ along a front path, weaving between clumps of lavender and pink verbena for a romantic cottage approach – for lovers of classic, “girly” front gardens.
- Kitchen-Garden Frame – Use rows beside vegetable beds with chives, sage and calendula to soften productive plots while keeping paths clearly defined – for home cooks who want beauty around their crops.
- Patio Tea Corner – Plant in 50-litre terracotta tubs with tall verbena and dwarf cosmos to create a cosy, colour-rich nook around a small bistro set – for urban owners of compact terraces.
- Formal Storybook Bed – Arrange in a geometric bed with clipped box balls and silvery Artemisia ‘Oriental Limelight’ to echo traditional palace parterres – for fans of ordered yet romantic layouts.
- Family-Friendly Divider – Line the edge between lawn and play area, with hardy geraniums and catmint drifting through, to mark zones softly but clearly – for families wanting structure without harsh fencing.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda bedding rose from the Palace collection; registered as POUlpal103 and marketed as Patras™ Palace® POUlpal103, classified horticulturally as a compact shrub rose for garden and container use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in Denmark in 2021 by L. Pernille and Mogens Nyegaard Olesen for Poulsen Roser A/S, with commercial introduction after 2022; exact parentage remains undisclosed but selected for compactness and garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Low, bushy plant reaching around 24–36 cm in height and 28–42 cm spread, with dense, glossy mid‑green foliage and moderate prickles, forming a compact, cohesive mound suitable for edging or bedding schemes. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, double, cup-shaped flowers with approximately 26–39 petals held in clusters; remontant habit gives abundant second flush, ensuring repeated flowering from early summer into the later season in suitable conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vivid, pure red blooms with RHS 46A outer and 46B inner tones; buds open from deep, matte red to a glossy, uniform red, later softening slightly towards crimson purple while maintaining good overall colour stability and impact. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Delicately sweet, mild fragrance typical of modern bedding floribundas; scent is present but discreet, adding a gentle background note around seating areas rather than dominating nearby planting or terrace spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally sparse due to the full double flower form; any hips that do develop are small, typically up to 6 mm in diameter, and of limited ornamental significance within normal garden and bedding uses. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 4, USDA 5b); disease resistance is medium for black spot, powdery mildew and rust, so occasional monitoring and treatment may be appropriate in humid seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, edging, containers and terrace planting; allow 30–55 cm between plants depending on use, with 8.2–9.4 plants per m² for mass effect, and provide routine feeding plus periodic health checks to support sustained flowering. |
PATRAS™ offers compact red clusters, reliable repeat flowering and long-lived own-root growth in everyday beds or large containers, making it a thoughtful choice if you favour enduring, easy colour with a quietly traditional feel.