CHÂTEAU DE VAUMARCUS – apricot-orange bedding floribunda rose
Step out to your front garden after rain and let fragrance and soft colour guide you along the path: CHÂTEAU DE VAUMARCUS settles naturally into smaller urban spaces, coping well with typical British rainfall and heavier soils when drainage is considered. Its upright, bushy habit and dense dark-green foliage give an immediate sense of structure, while clusters of semi-double blooms bring a refined peach glow that lightens to blush-pink as the flowers mature. Bred in Switzerland for resilience, this floribunda is quietly reliable, repeating its display from early summer onwards with a plentiful second flush that keeps your beds lively. Planted as a premium own-root rose in a practical 2‑litre container, it establishes steadily for long garden use: roots in year one, confident top growth in year two, and full ornamental presence by year three, suiting busy families seeking lasting balance in a green, sustainable front garden that still feels distinctly romantic.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| London terraced-house front garden bed |
The compact yet tall, bushy form builds vertical presence without overwhelming a narrow plot, while the warm peach-orange flowers soften brick and railings and stay neat with low maintenance for beginners |
| Rainwater-friendly planting strip by the pavement |
Deep, own-root anchoring and dense foliage create a stable, long-lived shrub that copes with redirected rainwater and typical British showers when combined with simple gravel or bark mulching for urbanites |
| Clay-based family border with perennials |
Robust roots and disease resistance make it a sound choice where heavier clay is improved for drainage, offering dependable flowering amongst lavender, sage or nepeta for homeowners |
| Low, informal flowering hedge |
Regular, upright growth and glossy dark foliage form a softly structured hedge, with repeating apricot-pink blooms adding colour rhythm along paths and driveways that is easy to keep in shape for busy-gardeners |
| Feature rose in a large container (40–50 litres) |
In a generous, well-drained pot this own-root shrub builds longevity and recovers well after pruning, offering a scented focal point on balconies or patios with straightforward seasonal care for balcony-owners |
| Pollinator-accent planting with airy companions |
Semi-double blooms offer moderate access to nectar, and when combined with airy daisies or lady’s mantle, the border has gentle movement and seasonal interest that supports light pollinator activity for nature-lovers |
| Low-intervention family play garden edge |
Good resistance to black spot, mildew and rust keeps foliage presentable without frequent spraying, so paths and play areas stay framed by healthy greenery and soft-toned flowers for young-families |
| Small parklet or communal green space |
Premium hardiness and sturdy shrub structure translate well to exposed, shared plantings, maintaining form and colour with minimal attention in typical wet, breezy conditions for community-gardeners |
Styling ideas
- Girly-frontage – Underplant with lady’s mantle and Mexican daisy for a frilly, pastel skirt that softens railings and steps – ideal for style-conscious beginners
- Soft-hedge – Plant in a loose line, weaving in lavender for scent and structure to frame a path – for families wanting gentle boundaries
- Balcony-focus – One shrub in a 50‑litre pot with trailing nepeta gives long-season colour and fragrance in minimal space – perfect for urbanites with limited time
- Pastel-mix – Combine with pale salvia and airy grasses for a light, sustainable border that moves in the wind – suited to low-intervention gardeners
- Parklet-charm – Group three plants with underplanting of pachysandra to cover soil and manage splash in public spots – useful for community project planners
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
CHÂTEAU DE VAUMARCUS (Gideb) is a floribunda bed rose, ARS exhibition name CHÂTEAU DE VAUMARCUS, commercial type bedding floribunda rose within the Bed rose collection. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in Switzerland by Alain and Gisèle Tschanz, breeding and registration year 2000, with parentage and initial distributor not documented in current cultivar records. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy shrub with dense, glossy dark-green foliage, 130–170 cm high and 100–140 cm wide, forming a substantial, well-filled presence in beds or as a specimen. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup to chalice-shaped blooms with 17–25 petals, medium-sized at roughly 4–7 cm across, carried mainly in small clusters of one to three flowers per stem. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Warm peach-orange centre fading through creamy peach to pastel pink and pink-lavender edges; ARS ob, RHS 34B outer and 36C inner, with moderate colour stability in sun. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Discernible, medium-strength sweet, fruity fragrance that is noticeable on still, humid days and after rain, adding sensory value along frequently used paths or seating. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose-hip formation is generally slight; where present, spherical orange-red hips develop, around 13–17 mm in diameter, adding occasional late-season ornamental interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated resistant to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, with winter hardiness to about −32 to −29 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zon 5, USDA Zone 4b) for reliable overwintering. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny beds, hedges or urban green spaces; low maintenance with good disease resistance, recommended spacings 110–180 cm depending on use, partial shade not preferred. |
CHÂTEAU DE VAUMARCUS offers long-season peach-orange bloom, dependable disease resistance and durable own-root growth, making it a thoughtful choice for relaxed, sustainable family gardens.