EPI D'OR – yellow hybrid-tea rose – Delbard
With its radiant French heritage and glowing yellow blooms, EPI D'OR brings a romantic, almost storybook cottage charm to everyday family gardens, without demanding complicated maintenance. This bushy, compact hybrid tea thrives in typical British plots, coping reliably even where strong breezes and showers roll in from the coast, so you can enjoy its colour without fuss. The luminous, long-lasting flowers hold their medium-yellow tone beautifully, opening from plump buds into generously double cups with a soft, fruity fragrance that suits afternoon tea beneath an arbour. As an own-root rose in our pharmaROSA® ORIGINAL 2‑litre format, it settles in steadily, brushing off the stresses of replanting and building a reliable framework for years of bloom. Over time, its stable, mid-green foliage and gently warming colour make it a natural partner for pastel perennials and kitchen-garden borders. Planted into improved soil or raised beds, it is well suited to the clay and chalk conditions found in many UK gardens, rewarding patient beginners with dependable repeat flowering. Give it a generous container of 40–50 litres or more on the terrace and you can enjoy that golden, own-root longevity close to the house, with the pleasing arc of first roots, then strong new shoots, and finally a full romantic display by its third season.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Feature rose by a seating area |
The XL, cup-shaped yellow blooms are ideal for enjoying at close quarters, especially near a bench or small terrace where their gentle fruity scent can be appreciated without being overpowering; perfect for relaxed afternoon tea settings for homeowners. |
| Cottage-style mixed border |
The warm, medium-yellow colour holds well and combines easily with pinks, blues and silvers, giving a classic cottage look with minimal planning, while the bushy habit slots neatly between perennials and low shrubs for cottage-lovers. |
| Small family garden focal point |
Its compact 55–85 cm height creates an eye-catching yet manageable focal rose that will not overwhelm a modest plot, making it easy to position near paths or lawns where children play and adults relax for family-gardeners. |
| Low, traditional rose hedge |
Regular spacing at around 50–60 cm creates a low, gently formal hedge with consistent colour and form; moderate care is sufficient to keep a neat line, while own-root resilience supports a long-lived planting for traditionalists. |
| Large pot on patio or balcony |
In a 40–50 litre (or larger) container, its bushy shape and repeat flowering give a strong vertical accent with just basic feeding and watering; own-root vigour helps it cope with pot life and periodic repotting for busy-urbanites. |
| Borders in exposed or breezy positions |
The sturdy stems and relatively compact growth cope well where wind and rain are frequent, helping flowers stay presentable, which is useful in open suburban sites and gardens facing changeable, coastal-influenced weather for practical-owners. |
| Low-maintenance kitchen-garden edge |
Its moderate disease resistance and straightforward pruning (from light shaping to harder winter cuts) fit well with a low-input, food-and-flowers corner, providing cut stems without turning the kitchen garden into extra work for hobby-gardeners. |
| Long-term structure in established beds |
As an own-root rose, it rebuilds from the base if damaged and avoids graft-related decline, maturing over the first three years into a stable, bushy shrub that anchors planting plans for many seasons for long-term-planners. |
Styling ideas
- Golden-Tea-Nook – Plant by a small bench with soft-blue geraniums and lamb’s ear to frame the glowing blooms and create a gentle, afternoon-tea feel – ideal for romantic homeowners.
- Kitchen-Garden-Edge – Line the front of a vegetable bed with EPI D'OR interplanted with golden barren strawberry to link produce and ornament – for practical kitchen-garden fans.
- Pastel-Storybook-Border – Combine with blush roses, airy grasses and white perennials for a soft, fairy-tale border that feels timeless yet easy to manage – for lovers of classic cottage style.
- Sunny-Patio-Centrepiece – Grow one plant in a generous 50 litre container surrounded by low herbs so its yellow blooms light up paved spaces – for balcony and terrace gardeners.
- Low-Hedge-Frame – Create a low, repeating line along a path, backed with silver foliage such as Stachys byzantina to emphasise structure and colour – for planners of neat, traditional layouts.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as DELépi, marketed as Epi d'Or (Grands Parfums). Belongs to the Grands Parfums collection, used both as a garden rose and for exhibition. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Georges Delbard in France (1981) from complex hybrid tea parentage, introduced by Delbard in 1982 and distributed as a premium, fragrant yellow hybrid tea selection. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated: Gold Medal and Plus Belle Rose de France at Lyon (1981), plus Gold Medal at the Rome Rose Competition, confirming its ornamental quality. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, moderately thorny shrub reaching about 55–85 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, with moderately dense, matt, mid-green foliage providing a tidy, structured presence in beds or containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, cup-shaped blooms with roughly 26–39 petals, borne mainly singly on stems; flowers repeatedly through the season with notably plentiful second flush for cutting and display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Medium, luminous yellow (RHS 14A outer, 14B inner) with golden sheen; colour remains stable with minimal fading, finally softening to a gentle lemon-yellow tone late in bloom. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Pleasantly fruity scent of mild to moderate strength, noticeable at close range without dominating nearby seating areas, suitable for gardens where subtle fragrance is preferred. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasionally forms ellipsoidal hips around 15–21 mm across, coloured orange-red; hips are incidental rather than a key feature and usually secondary to the plant’s flowering display. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zon 3, USDA 6b) with moderate resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, responding well to basic preventative care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Space plants 50–60 cm apart in groups or hedges, 100 cm as specimens; allow about 2.8–3.2 plants/m², and provide moderate maintenance with occasional pest and disease checks as needed. |
EPI D'OR offers luminous, long-lasting yellow flowers on a compact, easy-care, own-root shrub that matures into a durable garden feature, making it a thoughtful choice if you favour romantic structure with modest maintenance.