Iceberg
White · repeat-blooming · Zones 5-9
Orange-red with a silver eye and reverse.
A orange/red member of the floribunda roses group, Matangi is grown for its long succession of blooms and its fragrance. Below you'll find a full profile of Matangi — its characteristics, how to grow it, where to use it in the garden, and answers to the questions gardeners ask most.
As one of the floribunda roses, Matangi carries the traits gardeners look for in the group — medium blooms carried in large clusters. Where a hybrid tea gives you one perfect flower, a floribunda gives you a whole trussful, which makes it the better choice for sheer garden color.
In flower, Matangi is orange/red and fills the plant with bloom in wave after wave, carrying a moderate, clearly noticeable fragrance. It is hardy across USDA zones 5-9, so it suits a wide range of gardens with the right seasonal care.
Matangi makes bushy, compact, well-branched plant, typically around 2.5 to 4 feet tall and 2 to 3 feet wide. The blooms are medium blooms carried in large clusters, medium in size, set against glossy green foliage. Knowing a rose's habit and mature size is the key to placing it well: give Matangi room to reach its full spread without crowding its neighbors, which also keeps air moving through the plant and disease at bay.
Plant Matangi 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.
Matangi suits bedding, low hedges, mass plantings, and mixed borders. Mass several plants of one variety for a block of color, edged with catmint, salvia, or lavender. For more ideas, see our guide to companion plants for roses.
Floribundas are generally hardier and more disease-tolerant than hybrid teas. 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.
Matangi typically grows about 2.5 to 4 feet tall and 2 to 3 feet wide, forming a bushy, compact, well-branched plant. Its final size depends on your climate and how you prune it.
Yes — Matangi has a moderate, clearly noticeable fragrance, and scent is one of the reasons to grow it.
Yes. Matangi 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.
Matangi is hardy in USDA zones 5-9. That range describes the winter cold it can survive; gardeners colder than zone 5 should give it winter protection or grow it in a movable container.
Floribundas are generally hardier and more disease-tolerant than hybrid teas. Give Matangi full sun, well-drained soil, and the ordinary seasonal care any rose appreciates, and it is a straightforward rose to grow.
Prune Matangi 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.