BUISMAN'S GLORY – pink bedding floribunda rose
With its vivid magenta-pink blooms and airy, single flowers, BUISMAN'S GLORY creates a light, playful atmosphere in even the smallest London front garden, while coping well where soil stays heavy after rain and needs careful drainage. Clusters of open, bee-magnet flowers repeat all summer, giving a long, colourful season without complicated pruning, supported by robust foliage and reassuring disease resistance. As an own-root shrub, it builds up steadily for a dependable, long-lived display, settling in with roots in the first year, then stronger shoots in the second, before reaching full ornamental value by the third. Its bushy, compact habit suits narrow beds, low hedges and generous 40–50 litre containers, making it a quietly sustainable choice for rainwater-friendly planting, while its self-cleaning flowers keep the plant looking naturally tidy for busy gardeners whose priority is relaxed, easy-care enjoyment.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small front garden bedding |
The bushy, compact habit and medium height make BUISMAN'S GLORY ideal for narrow terraced-house beds, giving structure without overwhelming the space and providing a soft, welcoming frontage for beginners. |
| Bee-friendly city planting strip |
Single, open blooms with exposed stamens are highly attractive to bees, so a short row along the pavement edge offers reliable nectar over a long season and supports local urban biodiversity for pollinator-conscious owners. |
| Low flowering hedge |
Planted at the recommended closer spacing, its bushy growth knits into a low, colourful hedge that defines boundaries neatly while remaining easy to look after for busy households. |
| Rainwater-conscious clay border |
This variety tolerates typical family-garden conditions where wind and regular rain move through heavier soil, especially if you improve the planting hole for better drainage, making it practical for urban gardeners. |
| Low-maintenance mixed bed |
Good disease resistance and self-cleaning flowers mean less deadheading and spraying, so you can combine it with perennials for colour and movement without adding to the weekly task list for time-poor owners. |
| Long-season family flower border |
Remontant flowering with a strong second flush keeps beds lively for months, offering reliable colour at child-height and a steady backdrop to everyday garden life for family gardeners. |
| Large container on balcony or patio |
In a 40–50 litre peat-free container, its moderate spread and height give proportionate impact, and own-root resilience helps it recover well if watering is occasionally irregular for balcony owners. |
| Public-facing sustainable planting |
Durable structure, low input needs and a long life on its own roots make it suitable for understated, resource-conscious schemes where consistent appearance and reduced replacement are valued by eco-minded planners. |
Styling ideas
- Urban-edge ribbon – Run a narrow line of BUISMAN'S GLORY along a front path with drought-tolerant cranesbills to form a soft, bee-friendly welcome – ideal for design-aware city homeowners.
- Pink-park drift – Mass-plant in gentle curves, interspersed with threadleaf coreopsis, for a low, constantly flowering carpet effect – suitable for families wanting impact from a distance.
- Balcony-focus pot – Use one shrub in a 40–50 litre pot with underplanting of Nepeta for a long-season focal point – perfect for compact spaces needing easy colour.
- Soft-hedge frame – Create a low hedge around a small lawn or play area, pairing with lavender for scent and structure – good for households seeking gentle boundaries.
- Rain-garden band – Place in the better-drained upper edge of a rain-collecting bed, backed by airy calamint for movement and pollinators – fitting for those planning sustainable front gardens.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
BUISMAN'S GLORY is a floribunda bedding rose, also listed as Buisman’s Glory for exhibition use; an unregistered cultivar used under stable trade names in garden and bedding contexts. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by G. A. H. Buisman & Zonen in the Netherlands from ‘Karen Poulsen’ × ‘Sangerhausen’, introduced in 1952 for bedding and landscape use in temperate European conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub reaching about 75–105 cm in height and 50–70 cm spread, with moderately dense, slightly glossy light green foliage and moderate prickle coverage suited to family gardens. |
| Flower morphology |
Single, flat, cluster-flowered blooms with 5–12 petals and medium flower size, borne repeatedly through the season with an abundant second flush and generally good self-cleaning of spent blooms. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Magenta-pink flowers (RHS 53A/53B) with a paler centre and white eye; colour softens to raspberry-pink as blooms open, revealing golden stamens that darken slightly with age. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very faint, classically rose-scented character; fragrance is present but subtle, so the variety is chosen more for visual effect and pollinator support than for strong scent in the garden. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms moderate numbers of small, spherical red hips about 7–11 mm across, contributing a discreet decorative effect and some wildlife interest after the main flowering period. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7 and hardy to around –21 to –18 °C, with reported resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, supporting low-input maintenance in typical UK garden conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with improved soil structure; plant at 35–70 cm spacing depending on hedge or solitary use, using peat-free mixes and reliable drainage for long-lived, own-root performance. |
BUISMAN'S GLORY offers long-season colour, bee-friendly single flowers and low-maintenance resilience on its own roots, making it a thoughtful, enduring choice for a compact, sustainable garden or front plot.