The Most Fragrant Roses
Roses have a reputation for being difficult anyway, so if you go to the trouble of growing them, why not go for the complete package and choose the most fragrant ones?
For trellises and arbors, try climbers like Don Juan, New Dawn, America, and Madame Alfred Carriere.
Fragrant grandifloras like Radiant Perfume, floribundas like Honey Perfume or rugosas like Roseraie de l’Hay, Hansa, or Grootendorst Alba grow large and make stunning specimen plantings.
For culinary use Damasks like Kazanlik, Rose de Rescht, or Autumn Damask are the best choice, although all roses are edible, they are close cousins of apples, strawberries and meadowsweet.
Bourbons like Madame Isaac Pereire and Louise Odier have it all: exquisite flowers, large and abundant, strong fragrance, disease resistance and repeat bloom.
English roses were bred to blend the unmatched beauty of old roses with the repeat bloom and resilience of modern species, are many are intensely fragrant. The choices are too many to count, but if you pick just one, let it be Gertrude Jekyll, which is considered the most fragrant rose.
Albas like Madame Plantier and gallicas like the Apothecary rose or Reine des Violettes are the ones which gave roses their reputation of being difficult, but if you’re willing to devote them a lot of care, they will reward your effort.
I left the hybrid teas for last; they come in every color, fragrance and bloom shape. The only problem is choice. Double Delight, Fragrant Cloud, Mr. Lincoln, or Pope John Paul II would make a good starting point.