Coral Drift
Coral orange · repeat-blooming · Zones 4-11
Butter-yellow miniature groundcover.
Buttercup Drift is a groundcover rose in yellow that earns its place through season-long bloom and healthy, easy growth. Below you'll find a full profile of Buttercup Drift — its characteristics, how to grow it, where to use it in the garden, and answers to the questions gardeners ask most.
Grouped among the groundcover & drift roses, Buttercup Drift shows the hallmarks of the class: small single or double flowers borne in profuse clusters. Its low, spreading shape makes it as much a landscape plant as a flower, carpeting ground that would otherwise need mowing or mulch.
In flower, Buttercup Drift is yellow and fills the plant with bloom in wave after wave, carrying a light, pleasant fragrance. It is hardy across USDA zones 4-11, so it suits a wide range of gardens with the right seasonal care.
Buttercup Drift makes low, wide-spreading, mounding plant, typically around 1 to 3 feet tall and 2 to 4 feet wide. The blooms are small single or double flowers borne in profuse clusters, small in size, set against small, glossy, and healthy foliage. Knowing a rose's habit and mature size is the key to placing it well: give Buttercup Drift room to reach its full spread without crowding its neighbors, which also keeps air moving through the plant and disease at bay.
Plant Buttercup Drift where it will get at least six hours of direct sun a day in fertile, well-drained soil with good air movement around it. In cold climates, set the graft union — the swollen knob where the variety joins the rootstock — at or just below the soil line; in mild climates, keep it at soil level. Once planted, water deeply and less often to encourage deep, drought-resistant roots.
Buttercup Drift suits slopes and banks, edging, the front of borders, large containers, and weed-suppressing ground cover. Plant it in drifts of three or five, or let it spill over a low wall or the rim of a container. For more ideas, see our guide to companion plants for roses.
Groundcover roses are among the most disease-resistant of all roses and are usually self-cleaning. Watch for the usual rose troubles — black spot, powdery mildew, and aphids — and head them off with good air flow, base watering, and a tidy autumn clean-up. See our full guide to rose diseases and pests for identification and treatment.
Buttercup Drift typically grows about 1 to 3 feet tall and 2 to 4 feet wide, forming a low, wide-spreading, mounding plant. Its final size depends on your climate and how you prune it.
Buttercup Drift has a light, pleasant fragrance; it is grown more for its yellow color and habit than for perfume.
Yes. Buttercup Drift is a repeat-blooming rose that blooms in repeated flushes from late spring until the first frost, especially if it is deadheaded and fed through the summer.
Buttercup Drift is hardy in USDA zones 4-11. That range describes the winter cold it can survive; gardeners colder than zone 4 should give it winter protection or grow it in a movable container.
Groundcover roses are among the most disease-resistant of all roses and are usually self-cleaning. Give Buttercup Drift full sun, well-drained soil, and the ordinary seasonal care any rose appreciates, and it is a straightforward rose to grow.
Prune Buttercup Drift in late winter to an open, outward-facing framework, then deadhead through the season — see our step-by-step guide to pruning roses for the full method.