GERTRUD FEHRLE – cream-white nostalgic rose – Schultheis
Step onto your front path after rain and you will notice how creamy blooms and glossy foliage glow against brick and paving, bringing a sense of balance to even the smallest London terrace. GERTRUD FEHRLE is a tall, bushy nostalgia rose with strong, anise-scented fragrance, bred to give generous repeat flowering through the season with very full, romantic flowers. On its own roots it settles in steadily, building a long-lived framework that copes well with typical British weather, even where soil stays heavy after rain and needs thoughtful drainage. Allow it three seasons – first roots, then shoots, then full garden presence – and you will gain a reliably elegant backdrop for sustainable, low-input planting. Ideal for relaxed, rainwater-friendly front gardens, hedges and wildlife-supporting underplanting, this shrub rose creates a soft, romantic vertical accent that pairs beautifully with herbs and perennials for a calm, green city retreat.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front-garden focal shrub by the path |
The tall, bushy habit and generous, very full blooms create an immediate focal point beside a front door or narrow path, giving structure without needing intricate pruning, ideal for time-poor homeowners and beginners. |
| Romantic flowering screen or loose hedge |
Planted at the recommended hedge spacing, the dense foliage and repeat flushes of cream-white flowers form a soft visual screen, offering privacy and a long flowering window with straightforward annual maintenance, suiting privacy-seeking families. |
| Rainwater-conscious border in heavy soil |
This own-root shrub establishes a deep, resilient root system that copes well where clay soils stay moist after showers, especially when combined with simple surface mulches and permeable paving, appealing to sustainability-minded urbanites. |
| Mixed perennial border with cottage feel |
The tall, upright shrub form partners beautifully with airy perennials such as lavender, sage or nepeta, its nostalgic flowers adding depth and romance while the dark foliage anchors looser plantings, ideal for relaxed-style gardeners. |
| Feature rose in a large container |
In a 40–50 litre peat-free container, this rose becomes a vertical accent for patios or small courtyards, with repeat flowering and a strong scent offering high impact from limited space, perfect for balcony and terrace owners. |
| Long-lived structural rose for family gardens |
As an own-root plant it gradually builds a durable framework that can regenerate from the base after pruning or weather damage, supporting a long garden lifespan with fewer replacements, reassuring practical-minded homeowners. |
| Scented seating-area backdrop |
The strong, distinctive anise fragrance carries well in still evening air, so one or two plants placed near a bench or dining area provide sensory value with only moderate routine care, rewarding outdoor-evening-loving couples. |
| Soft accent in wildlife-friendly schemes |
Although the very double blooms offer limited access to pollinators, the tall, leafy structure works well above underplanting of nectar-rich perennials, adding height and romance to broader wildlife efforts for eco-aware beginners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Portal – Train GERTRUD FEHRLE loosely around a narrow front path, underplant with catmint and pink geraniums for a soft cottage feel – ideal for terrace-front gardeners seeking charm.
- Elegant-Hedge – Plant a loose row along the boundary, weaving in lavender and sage for scent and structure – suited to families wanting privacy without solid fencing.
- Patio-Feature – Grow it in a 50-litre, peat-free container with trailing thyme and ivy at the base – perfect for balcony and courtyard owners with limited planting space.
- Evening-Nook – Position near a bench with white gaura and ornamental grasses to catch the light and fragrance at dusk – appealing to those who relax outdoors after work.
- Rain-Garden – Combine this rose with moisture-tolerant perennials in a free-draining raised strip beside permeable paving – for sustainability-minded urban gardeners managing roof and path runoff.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
GERTRUD FEHRLE, Romantic Rose collection; shrub rose, nostalgia type, Romantica group; current trade name GERTRUD FEHRLE Romantic Rose Schultheis; ARS exhibition name Gertrud Fehrle. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Christian Schultheis, Rosenhof Schultheis, Germany, from cross ‘James Galway’ × ‘Lucetta’; bred, registered and introduced in 2011 as a shrub rose for garden and exhibition use. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub reaching about 160–240 cm high and 120–200 cm wide, with dense, slightly glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickliness, forming an upright, structural presence in mixed borders or hedging. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, very full, ball to pompon-shaped blooms with over 40 petals, usually borne singly; remontant with a strong second flush, providing abundant flowers in repeated waves across the main growing season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Cream-white petals with a soft lemon-yellow centre; buds white with creamy-yellow tips, yellow tone softening as the flower opens then fading; ARS YB, RHS 155D and 4D, with moderate colour retention in full sun. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, distinctive anise-scented fragrance, noticeable at close range and around seating areas in still air; suitable where scent is a key design element in romantic or evening garden settings. |
| Hip characteristics |
Due to very double flowers, hip set is generally poor, though occasional small, spherical orange-red hips 6–10 mm in diameter may develop, offering limited autumn interest rather than a heavy crop. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated to approximately –21 to –18 °C, RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3; moderate resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, benefiting from good air circulation and basic preventative care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Medium maintenance; occasional pest and disease checks advisable. Recommended spacing: 110 cm for mass planting, 95 cm for hedging, 175 cm for specimens; own-root form suits long-term garden use and renovation pruning. |
GERTRUD FEHRLE offers tall, elegant structure, repeat flowering and strong fragrance in a durable own-root form, making it a thoughtful choice for long-lived, characterful family gardens.