HEART'S DELIGHT – pink‑magenta bedding floribunda rose - Robert Webster
This compact floribunda brings colour and cottage‑garden charm to small front beds and borders, rewarding you with generous repeat flowering and a medium‑strong, slightly sweet fragrance. Its bushy habit and moderate height make it easy to place in everyday family gardens, where you want reliable flower clusters rather than complicated pruning regimes. As an own‑root plant it builds long‑term stability and recovers well after harsher winters, gradually settling into a balanced, rounded bush. In typical British conditions it performs well when soil preparation ensures good drainage on heavier clay, helping the root system stay healthy and active. From the first year’s root building through stronger shoots in year two to full ornamental value by year three, it quietly develops into a lasting focal point. Ideal for those who appreciate garden simplicity, this rose fits naturally into mixed cottage borders, small groups near the house, or even larger containers where regular watering can be assured.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden feature bed |
The bushy, compact habit and medium height create a neat, legible structure that works well close to the pavement or front path, offering bright magenta‑pink clusters that stay eye‑catching across the season for appearance‑focused beginners. |
| Small mixed cottage border |
Its repeat flowering and shifting pink‑to‑lilac colour tones thread easily through perennials and traditional cottage plants, adding rhythm and depth without demanding exacting pruning, appealing to relaxed cottage‑style gardeners. |
| Low informal hedge along a path |
Planted at the recommended closer spacing, the compact, moderately thorny bushes knit into a low, flowering line that gently defines paths or drive edges while remaining manageable to clip and tidy, suiting structure‑loving home gardeners. |
| Specimen rose in a small bed |
As a single planting at the wider spacing, Heart’s Delight reads as one rounded shrub with layered blooms, giving a strong focal point without needing supporting plants, ideal for those wanting one dependable “pet” rose. |
| Group of 3–5 by the house |
Clustered planting near doors, patios or bay windows makes the medium‑strong scent and successive flower waves more noticeable in daily life, rewarding occasional deadheading with a consistently pretty view for busy family households. |
| Large patio container (40–50 litres+) |
In a generously sized container with steady watering and feeding, the compact frame and repeat flowering give long seasonal display on terraces or balconies, with easy access for care, attractive to small‑space urban gardeners. |
| Rose bed with long-term structure |
Being own‑root, the plant regenerates reliably from its base, holds its shape for many years and does not revert to rootstock, supporting durable rose schemes for planners of long‑lived home gardens. |
| Border in heavier clay soils |
Where beds are improved or lightly raised, its own‑root resilience combines with better drainage on heavier ground, helping it adapt over time to local conditions and maintain a stable display, reassuring cautious first‑time rose growers. |
Styling ideas
- COTTAGE PAIRING – weave Heart’s Delight through billowing hardy geraniums and airy campanulas for a soft pink‑and‑blue tapestry – ideal for lovers of traditional cottage borders.
- FRONT-PATH EDGE – repeat small groups along a garden path with low lavender or nepeta at their feet to frame the approach to the door – perfect for homeowners wanting a classic, tidy welcome.
- PATIO CENTREPIECE – plant one rose in a 50‑litre terracotta pot with trailing thyme or bacopa around the rim to enjoy flowers and fragrance on the terrace – suited to balcony and courtyard gardeners.
- ROSE-ONLY BED – arrange 5–7 plants in a gentle arc, underplanted with low spring bulbs, so the compact bushes create a simple, long‑term flowering rose display – good for those preferring straightforward planting schemes.
- COLOUR HARMONY – combine with purple salvias, silver‑leafed artemisia and white gaura so the shifting pink‑magenta blooms sit in a cool, refined palette – appealing to design‑conscious beginners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda bed rose; registered as WEBhawk, marketed as Heart's Delight Bedding rose Webhawk; ARS exhibition name Heart’s Delight; own‑root pharmaROSA ORIGINAL 2‑litre garden plant. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in the United Kingdom by Robert Webster from ‘Frederick Keeling’ × ‘Rhapsody in Blue’; registration and introduction around 2012; selected as a compact bedding floribunda for ornamental garden use. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, compact shrub reaching about 80–110 cm high and 50–70 cm wide; moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage; moderately thorny stems; designed for beds, borders and smaller planting areas. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi‑double, cup‑shaped, medium‑sized blooms (approximately 4–7 cm); 13–25 petals arranged in clusters; freely repeating with a notably generous second flush given appropriate feeding and deadheading. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Bright pink‑magenta with lilac tones, ARS DR, RHS 60A–60B; buds open dark magenta, then soften to pastel pink with occasional whitish edges and a lilac‑grey veil as they age, giving varied colour effects on the bush. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium‑strength, distinctly sweet fragrance noticeable at close range, especially in still, mild weather; primarily ornamental but with enough scent to enjoy on seating terraces or near doors and frequently used paths. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small, spherical hips 10–14 mm across, dark red (RHS 46A); decorative late in the season but usually not abundant, as deadheading to encourage repeat flowering limits hip formation on most plants. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to around −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b); foliage moderately susceptible to powdery mildew and black spot and highly susceptible to rust, so regular monitoring and timely disease control are advisable. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Prefers well‑drained, fertile soil; recommended spacings 35–70 cm depending on use; 4.9–5.7 plants/m² for mass planting; responds to feeding and protection programmes with stronger repeat flowering and better foliage. |
Heart's Delight offers compact, colourful repeat flowering with noticeable fragrance, forming a durable own‑root shrub that settles into family gardens with reassuring ease, making it a sound choice to consider for your next planting.