Kathryn Morley – Ausclub English shrub rose
This romantic English shrub rose wraps your small Irish garden in soft pink light, with rosette blooms that look at home in any cottage-style border. Bred by David Austin, it forms a naturally bushy shape with dense, dark green foliage that sets off the flowers beautifully and suits narrow Dublin front plots as well as wider country gardens. The medium-strong, sweetly fresh fragrance brings a gentle, uplifting note each time you pass by on a damp morning, even when frequent showers and cool air follow typical Irish rainfall across the season. Plant once and enjoy for years: as an own-root rose it builds itself up steadily below ground, then above, giving you a reassuring, low-fuss lifespan and reliable performance with only moderate care. In its first season it concentrates on roots, in the second it fills out with stronger shoots, and by the third year it settles into its full, romantic ornamental value.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Cottage-style front garden feature |
The bushy habit and 90–150 cm height make Kathryn Morley ideal as a soft, romantic feature beside a path or gate, reflecting classic Irish cottage style with repeat waves of pink rosettes through summer and suiting fragrance-loving buyers. |
| Relaxed flowering hedge |
Planted 90 cm apart, its dense foliage and moderate thorns create a gentle boundary with good coverage while staying welcoming; remontant flowering means the hedge never looks bare for long, which suits homeowners who enjoy structure without formality. |
| Mixed shrub and perennial border |
The translucent pink blooms blend easily with herbaceous planting, while the dark, glossy foliage provides contrast; remontant flowering keeps interest when perennials pause, with only moderate maintenance needed for busy urban garden owners. |
| Specimen rose near seating |
With medium-strong, sweetly fresh scent and large, very double flowers, one plant spaced at about 170 cm can be appreciated from all sides on a terrace or lawn edge, offering a charming focus for hobby gardeners who love to sit among their plants. |
| Cut-flower corner in family garden |
The long-stemmed clusters and 7–10 cm, very double rosette blooms look luxurious in vases, so a small dedicated bed gives you reliable cuts throughout the season, useful for those who want home-grown flowers without running a full cutting garden. |
| Own-root long-term planting |
Supplied on its own roots in a 2-litre container, this rose establishes steadily and can regenerate from the base if damaged, giving stable ornamental value over many years with simple pruning, ideal for beginners seeking a forgiving, durable shrub. |
| Moist, breezy Irish sites |
With moderate disease resistance, especially to black spot and powdery mildew, this cultivar copes well where humid, sea-breezy weather so often follows periods of persistent rain, reassuring those in Atlantic-influenced gardens along Ireland’s coasts. |
| Large container near the front door |
In a 40–50 litre or larger pot with good drainage and regular watering, Kathryn Morley brings colour and scent right to the doorstep, ideal where ground is limited but you still want a welcoming, romantic display for small-space city gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Romantic – Combine Kathryn Morley with Geranium macrorrhizum and soft grasses for a loose, old-fashioned feel – for those who want a storybook cottage look.
- Terraced-Chic – Line a Dublin front path with a short hedge of this rose underplanted with low cranesbill – for urban owners seeking charm without clutter.
- Pastel-Mix – Pair the soft pink rosettes with white foxgloves and pale lavender in a mixed border – for gardeners who love gentle, harmonious colour schemes.
- Vertical-Poetry – Let a Clematis 'Fairy Slippers' weave through the shrub for layered pink-on-pink interest – for romantics who enjoy intricate flower combinations.
- Doorstep-Welcome – Grow one plant in a generous clay pot with trailing thyme at the rim – for anyone wanting an inviting, scented entrance with minimal effort.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
English shrub rose from the English Rose Collection; registered as AUsclub, traded as Kathryn Morley / Ausclub English Rose; ARS exhibition name: Kathryn Morley; exhibition category shrub rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by David C. H. Austin in the United Kingdom in 1990 from ‘Mary Rose’ × ‘Chaucer’; introduced after 1995 by David Austin Roses Ltd., registration year 1995. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub 90–150 cm high and 90–135 cm wide, with dense, dark green, glossy foliage and moderate prickles; forms a substantial, rounded plant suitable for beds, hedges and specimen use. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, 7–10 cm, very double rosette blooms with 40+ petals, borne in clusters; remontant with abundant second flush; primarily ornamental, with limited self-cleaning data available. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Refined clear pink (RHS 65C–65D) softening toward the petal edges; buds show silvery pink, flowers fade to pearl-pink with near-white margins before dropping, giving a delicate, luminous effect in the garden. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength, noticeably scented blooms with a sweetly fresh character; ideal near paths, doors or seating where the perfume can be appreciated without being overpowering during peak flowering periods. |
| Hip characteristics |
Due to very double flowers, hip set is generally low; where pollinated, it may produce small, spherical red hips 8–12 mm in diameter, adding light seasonal interest in late season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4); requires reliable watering and does not tolerate prolonged drought; moderate disease resistance with good tolerance to black spot and powdery mildew. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Prefers sunny, well-drained soil; space 90–170 cm depending on use; 1–1.2 plants/m² for mass planting; medium maintenance, occasional plant protection; suitable for beds, hedges, specimen planting, parks and cutting. |
Kathryn Morley (Ausclub) offers romantic repeat flowering, a sweet fresh scent and a durable own-root shrub form that will reward you steadily over the years, making it a thoughtful choice if you value long-lived, easygoing beauty.