BIENVENUE – pink climbing rose – Delbard
Let Bienvenue frame your garden like a romantic storybook gateway: cup-shaped blooms in soft, lavender-pink shades create an atmosphere of timeless elegance and afternoon-tea cosiness around arbours and pergolas. This climber is bred for endurance, forming a stable, well-anchored framework that copes reliably with blustery, rain-laden British weather where good drainage is assured even on heavier soils. Its very strong, layered fragrance drifts across the garden, while dense, dark green foliage adds reassuring structure all season. Bienvenue flowers repeatedly, giving generous, large clusters of full, exhibition-quality blooms that invite relaxed, low-stress enjoyment. As an own-root plant, it offers quiet longevity and the ability to recover from pruning or mishaps over time, becoming a dependable vertical accent in the heart of your cottage-style sanctuary.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Arbour or rose arch in a family garden |
Bienvenüe’s climbing habit and dense foliage quickly clothe arches and arbours, creating a romantic “welcome” tunnel with fragrant, large, full blooms. Own-root vigour ensures a long-lived frame that can be refreshed by pruning when needed for beginners. |
| Against a sunny house wall or garage |
The stable framework and moderate height make it ideal for training along wires or trellis on house walls, softening brickwork with layered pink-lilac tones. Medium maintenance and own-root resilience support easy long-term care for busy-urban-owners. |
| Traditional cottage-style front garden |
Planted near a gate or path, Bienvenue creates a classic cottage greeting, combining strong scent with storybook colour. Its dependable remontant flowering gives repeated displays, while steady anchoring suits exposed, breezy approaches for cottage-lovers. |
| Kitchen garden edge or potager entrance |
Use this climber to mark the entrance to a potager or kitchen garden, where its decorative clusters and fragrance contrast with vegetables and herbs. Own-root durability means it copes well with occasional neglect in busy seasons for family-gardeners. |
| Raised bed or heavy-clay border with support |
In clay-based gardens, a raised bed or improved strip by a fence lets the roots drain well, while the strong framework rises above lower perennials. The plant’s established, own-root base supports long service life in such positions for clay-soil-owners. |
| Large container on terrace or patio (40–50 L+) |
Bienvenue can be grown in a roomy 40–50 litre or larger container with a sturdy obelisk or trellis, bringing scented vertical colour to patios. Regular watering and feeding are straightforward tasks, and own-root growth gives good regeneration for balcony-terrace-users. |
| Small informal hedge along a path or drive |
Planted at hedge spacing and loosely trained along low wires, the climber forms an airy flowering screen. Repeating flowers and dense foliage offer gentle privacy, while simple annual trimming keeps the structure in check for low-maintenance-seekers. |
| Feature climber near seating or “afternoon tea” corner |
Its very strong, layered scent is best appreciated beside a bench or seating area, where repeated flushes perfume family gatherings. An own-root plant builds roots in the first year, pushes stronger shoots in the second, and shows full ornamental value by the third for patio-entertainers. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-arch romance – Train Bienvenue over a wooden arch with feverfew and daylilies at the base to echo its pastel pinks and soften walkways – ideal for cottage-lovers seeking a storybook entrance.
- Kitchen-garden gateway – Flank the entrance to a potager with paired climbers, underplanting with herbs and low vegetables for a productive yet romantic threshold – suited to family-gardeners who like traditional structure.
- Pastel patio retreat – Grow Bienvenue in a 50 litre container with an obelisk, combining with soft lavender and anemones for a scented evening corner – perfect for busy-urban-owners wanting impact in little space.
- Soft-screen border – Use a loose row along a low fence, interplanted with ornamental grasses and white perennials to build a gentle, semi-transparent screen – good for low-maintenance-seekers needing light privacy.
- Storybook seating nook – Place a bench beneath a simple pergola clothed with Bienvenue, surrounding it with old-fashioned perennials to enhance the nostalgic fragrance – for romantic-gardeners creating an afternoon tea spot.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Climbing rose, large-flowered; registered as DELrochipar, marketed as Bienvenue – Fragrant Memories of Love. Approved exhibition name Bienvenue, belonging to the Fragrant Memories of Love collection. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Georges Delbard in France (1999), introduced and registered by Delbard SA in 2011. Parentage is unpublished; selection focused on fragrance and garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous climber with creeping habit, 200–320 cm tall and 100–170 cm spread. Dense, dark green, slightly glossy foliage; moderately thorny stems require training on supports or wires. |
| Flower morphology |
Large (approx. 7–10 cm), very full, cup-shaped blooms with 40+ petals. Produced mainly in clusters, remontant with a generous second flush. Spent blooms persist and usually need deadheading. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pale mallow-pink with lavender shades; buds mauve-pink, opening mid-pink then lightening to pastel lilac-white outer petals. Colour fades with a soft, powdery, silvery tone over the flowering period. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very strong, complex, layered scent noticeable from a distance. Bred primarily as an ornamental, perfumed garden climber rather than for pollinator value due to heavily double flower form. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small spherical hips, about 8–13 mm across, coloured red (RHS 40A). Not produced in notable quantities, adding only minor autumn interest on established plants. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Medium resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; monitoring and occasional treatment may be needed. Hardy to around −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3) under normal garden conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny sites with fertile, well-drained soil; dislikes prolonged drought, so regular watering is important. Suitable for arches, pergolas, walls and as a cut-flower source in family gardens. |
Bienvenue Fragrant Memories of Love DELrochipar offers strongly scented, repeatedly flowering pastel blooms on a long-lived own-root climber, making it a graceful, low-fuss choice for welcoming arches and family seating areas you may happily invest in.