SALAMMBO – dark red climbing rose – Delbard
With its velvety, dark-red blooms and elegant vertical habit, Salammbo creates a romantic focal point on arches, walls and pergolas in the classic British front garden. Medium-maintenance yet rewarding, it offers reliable repeat flowering through the season, with a slightly lighter show the second time but always rich, dramatic colour. Its glossy, mid-green foliage forms a dense backdrop that helps the flowers really glow, while the moderate vigour is easier to manage on smaller boundaries than very rampant climbers. As an own-root plant, it settles in gradually for a long, stable life and can regenerate from the base after harder pruning or winter damage. Over time, the well-anchored root system copes steadily with typical British wet spells and heavy soils, especially where you help with reasonable drainage in the planting area. In the first year the plant concentrates on roots, in the second on framework shoots, and by the third delivers its full ornamental impact with curtains of colour. Ideal for homeowners who want a structured, tidy look rather than an overgrown tangle, it fits beautifully into cottage-style borders or more formal front-garden schemes. Combine with lighter, contrasting companions to highlight the colour of the blooms, and enjoy a long-term vertical feature that suits both beginners and enthusiasts.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| House wall or sunny façade |
Moderate height and spread make Salammbo well suited to typical two-storey UK houses, giving rich dark-red colour without becoming unmanageably vigorous. Trained on wires or a trellis, it creates an elegant, space-saving screen close to the home, ideal for the appearance-focused beginner. |
| Front-garden fence or boundary |
Its climbing habit and dense, glossy foliage provide a refined, semi-formal boundary that suits classic British front gardens. The vertical effect delivers impact even in smaller plots, while own-root stability supports long-term structure for the style-conscious homeowner. |
| Rose arch or entrance arbor |
Medium vigour and arching stems allow it to be guided neatly over an arch without overwhelming pathways. The dark-red flowers frame entrances with a welcoming, romantic feel yet remain reasonably easy to prune and tie in for the busy urban gardener. |
| Pergola or seating area |
The velvety, deep-red blooms and dense canopy create a shaded, intimate corner when trained along beams. As fragrance is very light, it suits seating areas where strong scent is not desired, offering a visually rich backdrop for the comfort-seeking family. |
| Small cottage-style mixed border |
Used as a vertical accent at the back of a small border, Salammbo brings dramatic dark-red colour that contrasts beautifully with perennials and pastel shrubs. Repeat flowering supports a long season of interest, appealing to the cottage-garden-loving novice. |
| Feature specimen on a sturdy obelisk |
Planted as a single specimen and trained around an obelisk, it forms an upright column of colour and glossy foliage. Own-root growth ensures the framework builds up steadily, giving a reliable, long-lived focal point for the design-conscious planner. |
| Raised bed in heavier or wetter soils |
Where gardens suffer from heavy clay, a raised bed with improved soil helps the own-root plant establish a strong framework while coping better during wet spells and blustery weather, anchoring itself securely for the practical-minded owner. |
| Large container on patio or balcony (minimum 40–50 L) |
In a generously sized container with support, Salammbo offers vertical interest and deep-red colour on patios or balconies. The controlled root space makes it easier to manage growth and watering, giving reliable effect for the space-limited urbanite. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Romance – Train Salammbo over a simple metal arch and underplant with airy perennials in soft pinks and whites, creating a romantic cottage-style entrance – for lovers of traditional front gardens and gentle colour contrasts.
- Formal Contrast – Use Salammbo against a pale-rendered wall with clipped box or yew below, the dark-red flowers standing out sharply against clean lines – for homeowners who enjoy a structured, classical look with minimal fuss.
- Evening Glow – Combine Salammbo on a pergola with white or pale-lilac climbers so the deep red appears richer at dusk – for those who spend evenings outdoors and value a calm, atmospheric seating area.
- Patio Column – Grow Salammbo in a 40–50 litre container with a tall obelisk, adding trailing seasonal bedding at the base – for balcony and patio gardeners wanting vertical interest in limited space.
- Boundary Screen – Plant along a front fence and intersperse with evergreen shrubs to create a year-round screen accented by rich summer colour – for busy families seeking privacy and order without complex maintenance.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Climbing rose, large-flowered exhibition type; registered as DELperl, marketed as Salammbo Climbing rose DELperl, a dark-red large-flowered climber for ornamental garden use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Georges Delbard, France, from ‘Messire Delbard’ × (‘Rouge Meilland’ × ‘Soraya’); bred 1990, registered 1990 and introduced in 1994 by Delbard; own-root garden form. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Medium-vigour climbing habit, around 200–320 cm high and 120–200 cm wide; dense, mid-green glossy foliage; moderately thorny canes; best trained and tied to supports. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped blooms with roughly 13–25 petals; medium flower size in solitary arrangement; repeat-flowering with a lighter second flush; self-cleaning only moderate. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Velvety deep red with a slight purple undertone; ARS dark red, RHS 60A outer and 59A inner; colour holds well with only slight fading in strong sun; buds and newly opened flowers appear very dark. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak and barely perceptible, making it suitable where strong scent is not desired; semi-double to double flower form offers limited appeal for pollinators compared to single roses. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally sparse due to the semi-double form; when present, hips are small, about 10–14 mm, ellipsoid and dark red (RHS 40A), adding a discreet late-season accent. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Moderate disease resistance, with average tolerance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; winter hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish Zone 3) under normal garden conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny sites on walls, fences, arches or pergolas; prefers well-drained, improved soil; planting distances 140–250 cm depending on use; occasional deadheading and plant protection may be needed. |
SALAMMBO – dark red climbing rose – Delbard brings dramatic colour, manageable climbing growth and long-lived own-root reliability; a considered choice if you want a lasting vertical feature with character.