SOMMERWIND® – pink groundcover rose – Kordes
Let Sommerwind bring an easy, natural flow to your front garden: a low, spreading rose that swiftly knits together bare soil into a soft, pink tapestry while coping well with breezy, wetter British spells and heavier ground. Its semi-double blooms offer a light, pastel charm from early summer onwards, with petals that open warm and deepen gently towards the centre before fading to a softer blush. You benefit from a reliably floribunda-style display that renews itself, as most spent flowers drop cleanly, keeping the plant tidy with very little input. Bred by Kordes for resilience, this own-root shrub gives long-term stability and the ability to regenerate after stress, so it remains a dependable feature rather than a short-lived impulse purchase. The discreet fragrance and partially accessible stamens make it a modest but appreciated stop for visiting insects, supporting a more sustainable urban garden. Ideal for busy owners of balconies or small front plots, it is at its best in the ground, but can work in a large 40–50 litre container where its gently arching shoots soften hard surfaces and paths over the years.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| London terraced-house front garden |
This compact, spreading shrub quickly covers bare soil with dense foliage and pink clusters, giving a smart, finished look from the street with minimal upkeep or pruning, suiting time-poor city homeowners and beginners. |
| Rainwater-friendly urban planting strip |
Its ground-hugging habit and year-round structure help hold soil and slow run-off, making it a practical choice beside drives or pavements where you want gentle colour and easier management of frequent showers for urbanites. |
| Low-maintenance family border edge |
Good disease resistance and self-cleaning flowers mean less deadheading and spraying, so borders stay neat along lawns and play areas without constant attention, ideal for busy households and relaxed family gardeners. |
| Pollinator-supporting flower bed |
Semi-double blooms with partially open centres give moderate access to pollen while still offering generous colour, fitting mixed beds where you balance family-friendly prettiness with wildlife interest for nature-aware owners. |
| Groundcover on slopes or awkward corners |
The spreading habit and dense mid-green foliage knit together banks and tricky spots, reducing weeding and stabilising soil over time, particularly helpful where mowing is awkward for practical-minded garden planners. |
| Coastal or wind-exposed gardens |
Robust foliage and proven hardiness mean it copes well with wind and unsettled weather, keeping its ornamental value where more delicate roses struggle in changeable, breezy sites for resilient-plant-seeking buyers. |
| Large patio container (40–50 litres) |
In a generous, well-drained pot, its arching shoots spill softly over the rim, creating a long-season pink cushion by seating areas with only occasional pruning and watering needed for space-conscious residents. |
| Long-term sustainable planting schemes |
As an own-root rose it establishes roots strongly, then builds top growth, rewarding patience with stable performance over many years, fitting designs where permanence and low replacement rates matter for sustainability-minded customers. |
Styling ideas
- Soft-edged frontage – Plant in a ribbon along a low front fence, letting the pink flowers spill towards the pavement – suited to London terraces wanting gentle privacy and a friendly, welcoming feel.
- Pollinator lane – Underplant with nepeta or dwarf lavender to weave a bee-friendly strip that hums with life beside front paths – ideal for homeowners keen to support insects without losing neatness.
- Clay-tolerant sweep – On improved heavy soil, use broad drifts of this rose with feather reed grass for movement – for suburban plots seeking structure and colour that cope with typical British ground.
- Modern balcony pot – In a large cube planter, combine with upright sage for contrast between pink cushions and vertical spires – attractive for apartment residents wanting low-effort seasonal impact.
- Play-friendly border – Edge a family lawn with Sommerwind and evergreen St John’s wort to provide year-round greenery and soft colour – perfect for families needing robust, forgiving planting near activity areas.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Groundcover floribunda shrub rose; registered as KORlanum, marketed as Sommerwind® Ground cover KORlanum, also exhibited as ‘Surrey’ in ARS shows, classified within ground cover collections. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Reimer Kordes of W. Kordes’ Söhne in Germany, from ‘The Fairy’ crossed with an unnamed seedling; introduced and registered in 1985 through Kordes’ own distribution network. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated landscape rose: RNRS Gold Medal in the United Kingdom in 1987, ADR award in Germany the same year, and first prize at Paris Bagatelle rose trials in 1989 for garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Low, spreading habit 55–85 cm high and 100–170 cm wide, with dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickliness; forms a cohesive, ground-hugging shrub ideal for covering larger areas. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped flowers of medium size carried in clusters, typically 13–25 petals, blooming in a remontant pattern with plentiful repeat flushes, and good self-cleaning as spent blooms drop naturally. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Clear pastel pink flowers, RHS 65C outer and 68C inner, opening a warm vivid pink then lightening to pale tones; petals show fine ruffling, with colour softening gradually rather than sudden fading in sun. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Light, discreet scent with a mild character; not a strong perfume rose, but offers a gentle background fragrance that suits entrances and seating areas without overwhelming smaller outdoor spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Limited hip set due to semi-double form; where formed, hips are small, spherical, orange-red, around 8–13 mm in diameter, adding modest late-season interest without dominating the plant’s appearance. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7 and USDA zone 6b, tolerating approximately −21 to −18 °C; strong resistance recorded to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, alongside good heat and moderate drought tolerance in settled conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to groundcover, edging and mass planting in gardens and public spaces; thrives in full sun or light shade, needs protection from spring frost, and benefits from improved drainage on heavier British clays. |
SOMMERWIND® – pink groundcover rose - Kordes offers easy, low-maintenance colour, reliable groundcover and long-term, own-root resilience; an attractive option if you favour durable beauty over short-lived displays.