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About Aphrodite Rose Bushes
- Variety Aphrodite
- Type Hybrid Tea
- Colour Soft rose-pink
- Fragrance Strong, sweet classic rose
- Height 90cm (3ft)
- Flowering June to October, repeat-flowering
- Aspect Full sun
- Good for Cutting, borders, specimen planting
- Sold as Bare root (November–March) and potted plants
- Delivered By next-day courier. Collection from Castle Cary also available
Aphrodite is a soft rose-pink Hybrid Tea with large, perfectly formed double blooms and a strong, classic rose fragrance. A reliable repeat-flowering rose that makes an excellent cutting variety and a romantic focal point in any border.
Aphrodite, A Classic Rose for the Romantic Garden
Named after the Greek goddess of love, Aphrodite is a rose that lives up to its heritage. The soft rose-pink colouring is romantic without being garish, and the large, high-centred double blooms follow the classic Hybrid Tea form that gardeners have loved for generations. This is a rose that looks equally at home as a cut flower in a vase on your kitchen table as it does growing in your border.
The fragrance is strong and genuinely sweet, with that unmistakable classic rose scent that modern breeding has sometimes sacrificed in pursuit of colour or form. With Aphrodite, you get no such compromise. Flowering reliably from June through to October, it delivers repeat flushes of blooms across the growing season, so you will have a steady supply of cut flowers and a continually rewarding display in the garden.
At 90cm (3ft), Aphrodite reaches a manageable height for most borders and works well either as a specimen plant or grouped with complementary plantings. The upright habit and consistent flowering make it a dependable choice whether you are an experienced rose grower or returning to roses after a gap.
Why Aphrodite is Perfect for Cutting
If you cut roses for the house, Aphrodite should be on your list. The high-centred blooms hold their form well and the strong fragrance means a single stem can perfume an entire room. Cut in the early morning when the stems are full of water, choosing blooms that have just opened. They will continue to develop over several days indoors, giving you remarkable value from each flowering flush.
The soft pink colouring combines beautifully with white, cream, and deeper rose companions. A few stems of Aphrodite arranged with lavender or white lisianthus creates the kind of informal cottage-garden posy that always impresses.
Growing Aphrodite Successfully
Aphrodite needs full sun, ideally at least six hours daily, to flower well and develop its fragrance. Plant in fertile, well-draining soil enriched with compost or well-rotted manure. Feed with a balanced rose fertiliser in spring and repeat-feed through the growing season to maintain the flowering display. Deadhead spent blooms promptly to encourage new flowers, and carry out formative pruning in early spring to establish a framework of three to five strong stems.
Companion Plants for Romantic Roses
Pair Aphrodite with softly coloured perennials and complementary shrubs. Lavender echoes the romantic theme and attracts pollinators. Clematis grown through the rose adds height and structure. Consider allium bulbs for spring interest before the rose comes into flower, or underplant with herbaceous perennials like catmint and salvia for a softer, fuller effect. White or cream roses from our rose collection work beautifully alongside Aphrodite.
Why Buy Your Roses from Ashridge Nurseries?
We grow Aphrodite and our entire rose range on vigorous rootstock selected for our UK climate and soil conditions. All our roses are sourced from specialist growers who understand what British gardeners need. Award-winning service, backed by real horticultural knowledge. Browse our full rose collection.
Frequently Asked Questions
When should I prune Aphrodite?
Prune in early spring as new growth appears, cutting back last year's stems to about 45cm (18in) and removing any dead or diseased wood. Summer pruning should be light, focusing on deadheading and shaping. Read our detailed pruning guide.
How often will Aphrodite flower?
Aphrodite is a reliable repeat-flowering rose, producing blooms from June through October. The frequency of flushes depends on feeding, deadheading and weather, but you can expect new flowers roughly every 6-8 weeks in the growing season.
Is Aphrodite suitable for container growing?
Yes. Use a large pot at least 50cm deep, filled with quality rose compost or a 50/50 mix of peat-free compost and horticultural grit. Water regularly and feed weekly during the growing season. Containers dry out quickly, so check soil moisture daily in warm weather.
What fragrance profile does Aphrodite have?
Aphrodite has a strong, sweet classic rose fragrance. It is not spicy or fruity, but rather the unmistakable damask rose scent that has made roses beloved in gardens for centuries. Scent intensity varies with temperature and time of day.
Can I grow Aphrodite in partial shade?
Aphrodite prefers full sun for best flowering and fragrance development. In partial shade (less than six hours of direct sun), she will grow but produce fewer blooms and weaker scent. If shade is unavoidable, select your sunniest border position.


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