AGKON – pink hybrid tea rose - Agel
Elegant yet easy to manage, AGKON is a compact hybrid tea rose that fits beautifully into everyday British gardens, coping well even where windy weather and heavy showers regularly test plants. Its healthy, upright habit produces classic, high-centred blooms in a vibrant cyclamen-carmine pink, ideal for those who enjoy refined cut flowers straight from a small front bed. The variety’s strong disease resistance keeps foliage clean with minimal spraying, while its bushy structure remains tidy in modest spaces and near paths. As an own-root plant, it settles in reliably and develops steadily – roots first, then framework, then full display over three seasons – giving you a long-lived, balanced shrub. With good repeat flowering through the season, it provides dependable colour in borders and pots, rewarding regular deadheading rather than complex pruning. Simple to plant, straightforward to care for, AGKON offers reassuringly low-maintenance beauty for busy home gardeners.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point |
The tidy, upright bush and medium height suit small front gardens where space is limited but a clear focal point is needed near the door or along a path. Its vibrant pink, classic hybrid tea blooms give a smart, welcoming look with little effort for beginners. |
| Small flower bed in family gardens |
AGKON’s compact spread and recommended 45 cm spacing as a specimen make it easy to place in modest beds without crowding other plants. Regular repeat flowering keeps the area colourful through summer, even with only a few bushes, supporting low-input gardens for busy-owners. |
| Cutting patch for home bouquets |
The high-centred, pointed buds on straight, upright stems provide classic, florist-style blooms for cutting. Good remontancy means you can pick flowers repeatedly while the plant continues to perform in the border, ideal for simple home arrangements for flower-lovers. |
| Low-maintenance border backbone |
With strong resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, AGKON keeps its dark green foliage presentable without frequent spraying. This stability makes it a dependable structural rose in borders where you want colour and form but minimal ongoing tasks for time-poor. |
| Small group planting (3–5 bushes) |
Planted at 30 cm centres, short rows or small drifts of AGKON create a dense ribbon of pink along paths or drives. Its uniform habit and colour give a cohesive, “designed” appearance even in ordinary family plots, supporting confident results for non-specialists. |
| Mixed cottage-style planting |
The moderate height and upright structure allow AGKON to sit comfortably among perennials such as catmint, bellflowers or garden feverfew. The clean foliage and vivid pink flowers bring formality and contrast to softer cottage mixes, working well for style-conscious. |
| Container planting on patios |
In a 40–50 litre container with good drainage, AGKON’s bushy habit and medium size are easy to manage on patios or small terraces. Regular watering and feeding are straightforward, while the repeat-flowering display gives extended enjoyment close to seating areas for balcony-owners. |
| Exposed or breezy sites |
The sturdy, upright growth and relatively compact height help AGKON cope with gardens that experience regular rain and wind, particularly in more open or coastal-influenced settings, supporting a calm, reliable display for coastal-gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Neat-front-border – Line a short front path with a trio of AGKON bushes at 45 cm spacing for a crisp, formal ribbon of vivid pink – ideal for homeowners wanting a smart, low-fuss welcome.
- Cottage-duet – Combine AGKON with airy garden feverfew and catmint for a relaxed cottage border where the precise hybrid tea blooms contrast with softer flowers – perfect for lovers of traditional English planting.
- Patio-centrepiece – Plant a single AGKON in a 40–50 litre terracotta pot with fine-textured underplanting (such as low thyme) to create a focal point near seating – suited to small-terrace and balcony gardeners.
- Cutting-corner – Group 5 plants in a sunny square bed at 30 cm spacing for a compact cutting patch that supplies classic, long-stemmed blooms – appealing to those who enjoy arranging home-grown flowers indoors.
- Family-bed – Place AGKON near the centre of a mixed family border, framed by hardy perennials, so its steady flowering and tidy habit anchor the design – good for busy families wanting order without complexity.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
AGKON is a hybrid tea rose traded as AGKON – pink hybrid tea rose - Agel, with the American Rose Society exhibition name Agkon; no separate registered cultivar name is recorded. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Richard Agel in Germany and introduced by Agel Rosen in 1979, this hybrid tea rose has unknown parentage but reflects classic cut-rose form adapted for garden use. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub reaching about 60–85 cm high and 35–50 cm wide, with moderately dense, dark green foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a compact, manageable plant for beds and borders. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, double, 26–39-petalled solitary blooms with high-centred, pointed-budded hybrid tea form, carried mainly one per stem; good remontancy gives an abundant second flush in season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vibrant cyclamen-carmine pink blooms with magenta tone; outer petals lighten slightly to creamy pink as flowers age, while overall colour retention is good, providing a consistently bright medium-deep pink effect. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
This rose is considered unscented, with no noticeable aroma in normal garden conditions, so its primary ornamental value lies in flower shape, colour and health rather than perfume. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms sparse, small, globose hips 10–14 mm in diameter, red RHS 40A, which appear occasionally and add modest late-season interest without dominating the plant’s overall appearance. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Shows strong resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; classed as hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish Zone 3), suitable for most typical UK garden conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with regular watering during prolonged dry periods; space 30–45 cm depending on use, deadhead to offset weak self-cleaning, and use as bed, specimen or cut-flower rose. |
AGKON – pink hybrid tea rose - Agel offers clean foliage, reliable repeat flowering and compact, upright growth on a durable own-root plant, making it a thoughtful choice for long-term structure and colour in smaller gardens.