PRINCESS OF WALES – white bedding floribunda rose – Harkness
Princess of Wales is an easy-going choice if you would like a tidy, reliable white rose for a family garden without complicated maintenance. Its softly sweet, medium-strength fragrance and pure colour brighten front gardens, cottage-style borders and small beds, while the compact, bushy habit keeps the plant neat along paths or low hedges. Remontant flowering gives repeat flushes through the season, so you can enjoy a long season of bloom with minimal intervention. Own-root plants settle steadily and offer a reassuring lifespan, regenerating well after pruning or weather damage and holding their ornamental value year after year. In typical British conditions it performs reliably even where soil stays heavy, provided you give reasonable drainage and avoid waterlogged spots in prolonged rainfall and wind. Its manageable size suits both small beds and larger containers from 40–50 litres upwards, making it flexible around entrances and terraces. Think of its development as roots in the first year, stronger shoots in the second, and full ornamental impact from the third year onward, giving you confidence as it matures into a stable, long-term garden feature.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden focal bed |
The pure white, subtly ivory-tinted blooms create an immediate sense of order and brightness near the front door, while the compact, bushy habit keeps the display looking composed rather than sprawling, ideal for neat entrances and appearance-conscious homeowners. |
| Low flowering hedge along paths |
With a height around 65–95 cm and good foliage density, Princess of Wales forms a low, gently formal hedge that defines paths and driveways without blocking light, giving an elegant boundary that still feels welcoming for classic front-garden enthusiasts. |
| Small beds and mixed cottage borders |
Its repeat-flowering clusters and refined, medium-sized blooms layer easily with perennials and cottage favourites, adding calm, white structure through the season without dominating smaller borders, which is reassuring for space-limited garden owners. |
| Patio tubs and large containers |
The moderate spread and bushy growth suit large containers of at least 40–50 litres, offering a graceful white rose that is simple to water, feed and appreciate up close on patios, balconies and near seating, ideal for busy urban garden users. |
| Family seating area or contemplation corner |
The softly sweet, noticeable fragrance and serene white colour lend themselves to quiet corners for relaxation, delivering sensory interest without overpowering scents or colours, a gentle choice for fragrance-loving but low-maintenance-seeking beginners. |
| Long-season flowering feature in small gardens |
Remontant blooming with a generous second flush ensures dependable colour beyond the first summer peak, so even modestly sized plots gain repeated interest without replanting or complex care, suiting time-poor yet quality-conscious garden keepers. |
| Long-term backbone planting in established borders |
As an own-root shrub with H7-rated hardiness, it offers a stable, replace-from-the-base framework that copes well over many years, giving consistent structure and bloom for gardeners who want enduring plantings rather than frequently renewed collections. |
| Exposed or open-plot family gardens |
The balanced, bushy structure and reliable hardiness help it stand up to typical British weather in open sites, providing a composed presence even where plots face prevailing winds and periods of prolonged wet weather in rain-prone coastal regions. |
Styling ideas
- White-edged path – line both sides of a front path with Princess of Wales at hedge spacing for a low, fragrant white border – ideal for traditional front-garden owners who like a tidy, welcoming approach.
- Calm patio trio – plant three bushes in 50–60 litre terracotta pots with silver-leaved herbs for scent and texture – perfect for terrace gardeners wanting long-flowering, low-fuss container structure.
- Cottage blend – weave small groups among soft pink and blue perennials for a gentle, romantic mix where the white flowers provide calm highlights – suited to cottage-style enthusiasts seeking dependable repeat bloom.
- Family seating frame – use a short row behind a bench, mixing with lavender or low grasses so fragrance and soft colour frame the sitting area – good for families who want a relaxing, easy-care corner.
- All-season backbone – anchor a narrow bed with Princess of Wales, then add bulbs for spring and salvias for late summer, letting the rose provide continuity – useful for beginners planning a simple yet lasting layout.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda bed rose; registered as HARdinkum, marketed as Princess of Wales in the Masterpiece Collection, also approved as an exhibition floribunda shrub rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Robert B. Harkness in the United Kingdom and introduced in 1997 by R. Harkness & Co. Ltd., from a cross of ‘Sexy Rexy’ with (‘Pearl Drift’ × ‘Autumn Fire’). |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the RHS Award of Garden Merit (2002), indicating reliable garden performance, sound health and good ornamental value under typical UK conditions when grown with standard care. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, compact shrub around 65–95 cm tall and 50–70 cm wide, with dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickliness, giving a neat, well-filled outline suited to beds and low hedges. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped, medium-sized blooms with around 13–25 petals, carried in clusters; remontant with a generous second flowering that brings repeat display through the main growing season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure white base with soft ivory tones in the centre; buds open creamy, then brighten, with colour remaining clear and only slightly lightening in warm weather, giving a clean white effect in bloom. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength, softly sweet scent that is noticeable around the plant without being overpowering; semi-double form with accessible stamens offers partial value for visiting pollinators. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms moderate numbers of small, spherical hips around 10–14 mm, coloured orange-red, adding a gentle ornamental feature later in the season if spent flowers are not removed. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7 and hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C; disease resistance is medium to mildew, black spot and rust, so occasional monitoring and basic prevention may be beneficial. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with reasonable drainage; space 35–65 cm depending on hedge, bed or specimen use, and consider 40–50 litre or larger containers for long-term pot culture with regular watering and feeding. |
Princess of Wales offers pure white blooms, a compact, easy-to-place habit and dependable repeat flowering on a long-lived own-root shrub; a thoughtful choice if you value lasting structure with manageable care.