Cherry Girl - Floribunda RoseCherry Girl - Floribunda Rose

Cherry Girl Rose Bushes

Rosa Cherry GirlFeefo logo

The details

  • Colour: Red
  • Shape: Double, cupped, packed with petals
  • Scent: Medium
  • Flowering period: Repeats May-Oct
  • Group: Floribunda
  • Height: 1m
Choose a plant formWhat to expect
All
Potted
Choose a size
each
Qty
£
£ 16.98

Recommended extras

Sweet Pea, A Cottage Garden Collection
Sweet Pea, A Cottage Garden Collection Lathyrus odoratus Mix of 8 Plants, Min 4 Varieties From £10.95
Neudorff Rose Feed
Neudorff Rose Feed Organic Rose Fertiliser, 1 Litre From £5.87
Hidcote Lavender
Hidcote Lavender Lavandula angustifolia 'Hidcote' From £3.45

Description

Cherry Girl Floribunda Rose Bushes. 3 Litre Pots.

The charming, rustic red and deep pink double flowers have an old rose form, jam packed with petals, and look great over the semi-glossy, deep green, leathery foliage. 
Bushy, compact, and upright to 1m. 

Browse our range of Floribunda roses, or all of our rose varieties.

Features

  • Colour: Red
  • Shape: Double, cupped, packed with petals
  • Scent: Medium
  • Flowering period: Repeats May-Oct
  • Group: Floribunda
  • Height: 1m

Growing Cherry Girl Roses

Suitable for any well drained soil, they thrive on clay as long as the site isn't waterlogged in winter. They are best grown in full sun, and are suitable for large patio containers. 

Did You Know? 

Bred in 1997 from Rosenprofessor Sieber by Tim Hermann Kordes in Germany, code KORkosieb, and marketed since 2009. In Australia, it is sold as Gift of Friendship by Treloar Roses, who donate to Cord Blood Research for every plant sold. 

She has won six awards, including gold medals at the Courtrai / Kortrijk and Hradec Králové Rose Trials, and the 2008 winner at the Dublin Rose Trials.

Planting Instructions

How to plant Floribunda Roses

Bare root roses are planted between late autumn and early spring (approx November-March), and container grown plants at any time of year. 

All floribundas like a good amount of sun and hate being under trees. If planting against a wall, leave about a 45cm (18") space.

Dig a hole deep enough to place the graft union between your rose's stem and roots at soil level (so it's at approximately the same level in the soil as it was before being transplanted), with plenty of room for the roots to spread out.
Improve the soil from the hole by removing rubbish, large stones, weeds and roots, then mixing in about 25% by volume of well rotted compost or manure and dusting it with bone meal. It is usually more convenient to do the mixing on a ground sheet or in a wheelbarrow. 

If your rose is bareroot, wet the roots before planting. It often helps to make a small mound at the base of the hole to set the base of the rose onto and spread the roots over.
If pot grown, soak the pot and then gently loosen some of the roots. Sprinkle some Rootgrow onto the soil, put the rose on top of it, and sprinkle the rest over the roots. 

When the roots are spread out and the graft union is level with the soil, backfill the hole with the improved soil, firming it down as you go. Water in thoroughly, water again two days later, and then keep watering in dry spells during the first and second growing seasons. 

Ornamental roses are hungry feeders and flower best when they are mulched every year and given rose food during the growing season.