Bossa Nova – medium-pink bedding floribunda rose – POUloma
Effortless cottage-style planting is simple with Bossa Nova, a bushy, medium-pink floribunda that clothes the ground in low, spreading colour and suits family gardens looking for neat, reliable structure. Its floriferous, cluster-flowering habit brings small, rosette blooms in generous waves from summer onwards, and the foliage stays attractively dense for a long-season display. As an own-root plant it settles in securely and matures steadily, forming a balanced shrub that copes well with typical British conditions, even on exposed plots where wind and rain demand good anchorage. In the first years it concentrates on roots, then framework, then a full ornamental show, giving you dependable bedding colour with only light routine care. Suitable for beds, slopes and larger containers, it supports tidy, low-upkeep borders, is happy in partial shade, and works beautifully when you want a front-garden rose you can simply plant and allow to develop.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden bed by the path |
The low, bushy, spreading habit forms a welcoming pink band that stays tidy without intricate shaping, ideal along front paths where you want colour but not height. Small, rosette blooms repeat well and moderate self-cleaning keeps deadheading simple for the busy homeowner. |
| Family border in a small to medium garden |
Dense foliage and mid-pink clusters provide a soft, family-friendly backdrop that blends easily with perennials and cottage-style planting. The shrub’s width fills gaps quickly, while medium maintenance needs suit those happy with occasional checks rather than constant attention for the hobby gardener. |
| Groundcover on a gentle slope |
The wide-spreading growth knits together into a low, stabilising cover that helps visually anchor sloping areas and reduces bare soil. Own-root plants build a lasting framework that can be refreshed by simple pruning if stems ever age or suffer, reassuring the long-term planner. |
| Low hedge or edging strip |
Regular planting distances allow Bossa Nova to read as a continuous, pink edging line around lawns or driveways. Moderate pruning keeps the height in check without technical skills, and its medium maintenance profile fits those who want structure without formal topiary for the practical owner. |
| Mixed cottage-style bed with perennials |
The uniform medium-pink flowers combine smoothly with soft blues, whites and silver foliage, while the floribunda clusters give rhythm and repetition through the season. Reliable repeat flowering supports classic cottage schemes without the need for complex succession planting for the style-conscious beginner. |
| Urban courtyard or patio in a large container |
In a 40–50 litre container, the compact height but generous spread create a substantial feature plant for patios or courtyards. Medium drought tolerance means it copes between waterings if the pot is well prepared, making regular summer care manageable for the time-pressed city gardener. |
| Partially shaded side garden |
Suitable for partial shade, it still provides good flowering where sun hours are limited by neighbouring houses or fences. The dense foliage keeps the planting looking full even when blooms pause, supporting a consistently tidy look for the shade-challenged gardener. |
| Coastal or wind-exposed family plot |
The strong, bushy framework and own-root anchorage help it stand firm in gusty, rain-swept positions that are common in many British gardens, while medium disease resistance responds well to basic, occasional protection when needed for the weather-aware owner. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Band – plant Bossa Nova in an informal row along a front path, underplant with airy calamint and soft grasses for movement – ideal for lovers of relaxed, traditional frontage.
- Pastel Patch – group three to five plants in a small bed with white geraniums and silver foliage for a calm, pastel-toned focus – suited to those seeking a gentle, family-friendly palette.
- Terrace Focus – use a single plant in a 50 litre terracotta pot, underplanted with trailing thyme for scent and texture – perfect for compact patios where one strong feature is enough.
- Soft Edge – edge a lawn with spaced plants, alternating with low evergreen euonymus to keep structure in winter – good for homeowners wanting a neat yet not overly formal outline.
- Slope Weave – stagger plants on a mild bank and intersperse with dwarf lavenders to weave pink and purple drifts – for gardeners aiming to tame tricky levels with attractive cover.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda rose, bed rose group. Registered as POUloma, marketed as Bossa Nova Floribunda POULSEN™. ARS exhibition name Bossa Nova; exhibition category floribunda shrub rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in Denmark in 1983 by L. Pernille and Mogens Nyegaard Olesen for Poulsen Roser A/S; seedling parentage unknown × ‘The Fairy’; registered 1998, introduced after 1998. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, widely spreading habit, 75–105 cm high with 120–180 cm spread. Dense, slightly glossy green foliage, moderately thorny shoots; suitable for bedding, groundcover and low hedging. |
| Flower morphology |
Small rosette blooms, 0.5–1.5 inches, very double with 40+ petals. Cluster-flowering floribunda type with remontant habit, giving a plentiful second flush under normal garden care. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Uniform medium-pink (ARS MP, RHS 62C–62D). Buds deeper pink outside, pure mid-pink at opening, fading to pastel and then pale pink; colour retention good with soft, gradual lightening. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance very faint and barely perceptible, no distinct character reported. Highly double, tightly closed blooms usually conceal stamens, so they offer limited value for pollinator attraction. |
| Hip characteristics |
Moderately formed hips, approximately 10–16 mm diameter, developing after flowering where spent blooms are not removed; decorative effect modest and not considered a primary feature. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Medium resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; benefits from routine monitoring in humid seasons. Hardy to about −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4) with normal care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, groundcover, containers, edging and urban green spaces. Medium maintenance; prefers regular watering in dry spells. Allow space per recommended planting distances for best effect. |
Bossa Nova POUloma offers low, spreading colour, repeat flowering and partial-shade versatility in an own-root form that matures into a dependable, easily refreshed shrub, making it a thoughtful choice when planning a long-lived family garden rose.