Ausram – white landscape shrub rose - Austin
Imagine stepping outside after a soft shower, the garden washed in gentle light and this rose scattered with tiny, ivory-white pompoms: cloudlike clusters of bloom that turn a simple path into a short, joy-filled walk under raindrops. ‘Francine Austin’ (Ausram) is a compact English shrub rose that fits beautifully into Irish cottage borders and Dublin front gardens, bringing cheerful character without demanding complicated care. On its own roots it settles in steadily for a long life, building a solid framework that shrugs off typical garden ups and downs and rewards you with reliable flowering from early summer right into autumn. As it matures, this slightly spreading, bushy plant becomes a graceful, romantic presence that works equally well as a free-flowering specimen, a low hedge, or a generous cottage-style infill. With medium disease tolerance it appreciates good air flow and drainage, especially where rainfall and damp air can encourage black spot and mildew, yet its hardy, lasting nature makes it a sound choice for family gardens where you would like beauty but also time to enjoy it. In a 2‑litre own-root pot it is straightforward to plant and settle, supporting the quiet contentment of watching it thicken up and bloom through successive seasons: roots in the first year, stronger shoots in the second, then full ornamental value by the third. Its small, very double rosettes create a charming spray effect that looks delightful beside a gate, along a path, or under a window where you pass by every day.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Low cottage-style hedge along a front boundary |
The bushy, slightly spreading habit and 100–140 cm height make this rose excellent for a low, informal hedge, with dense sprays of small white blooms softening walls or railings and giving gentle privacy for years; well suited to the busy homeowner audience. |
| Romantic feature in a small to medium flower bed |
Very double, cluster-flowering rosettes provide a cloud of soft white colour from summer into autumn, ideal as a focal shrub in mixed plantings where you want long seasonal interest and a nostalgic English-rose feel, perfect for cottage-garden lovers buyers. |
| Specimen shrub near a doorway or garden bench |
At 100–140 cm tall and wide, with moderately dense foliage, it forms a rounded, elegant shrub that frames entrances or seating areas without overwhelming tight spaces, offering gentle scent and repeated flushes of bloom for relaxed enjoyment gardeners. |
| Cut flowers for small vases indoors |
The very double, small-headed clusters last well when cut, bringing delicate, ivory-white sprays and a mild muscat-like fragrance indoors; ideal for jam-jar posies and small arrangements that echo a traditional country-house style loved by creative arrangers. |
| Long-lived structural planting in family gardens |
As an own-root shrub, it regenerates well from the base and maintains shape over many seasons, without the unpredictability of grafted rootstock, providing stable structure and dependable display that matures gracefully with the garden and its caring owners. |
| Informal planting in urban green spaces or front verges |
Medium maintenance requirements and repeat flowering make it a practical choice for modestly tended communal spaces, giving a refined look without intensive care, especially where robust shrubs with consistent white bloom are appreciated by local residents. |
| Light, fragrant backdrop for seating or dining areas |
The soft, mild muscat-like fragrance and pure white colour create a calm backdrop that does not clash with other plants or outdoor décor, working beautifully behind benches or small patios where a gentle, unobtrusive scent suits relaxation-focused users. |
| Mixed border with shrubs and perennials |
Bushy growth, repeat flowering and very good colour retention let it weave through other shrubs and perennials as a reliable white accent, coping well with cool, damp Irish summers when provided with good drainage in wetter soils valued by practical beginners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Ribbon – plant a loose row along a path, interplanted with lavender and catmint, to create a frothy white edge that guides you to the front door – ideal for cottage-front homeowners.
- White-Window – position a single shrub beneath a ground-floor window, framed by low box or dwarf rosemary, for a romantic view from indoors – perfect for terrace and townhouse residents.
- Garden-Nook – flank a small bench with two plants and underplant with hardy geraniums for a quiet reading corner with gentle fragrance – suited to reflective garden users.
- Soft-Hedging – use a line of plants as a low, flowering boundary between drive and lawn, blending with ornamental grasses for movement and year-round structure – appealing to low-fuss families.
- Front-Border – mix with pink geraniums and airy gaura in a narrow front bed, giving layers of white and pastel colour from street to house – great for style-conscious urban gardeners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
English Rose shrub; floribunda-type landscape rose. Registered as AUSram, traded as Francine Austin (Ausram). ARS exhibition category: exhibition bush rose, suitable for garden and show use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Hybrid of ‘Alister Stella Gray’ × ‘Ballerina’, bred by David C. H. Austin in the United Kingdom (1988). Introduced after 1994 by David Austin Roses Ltd, reflecting traditional charm with modern garden performance. |
| Awards and recognition |
Glasgow Certificate of Merit (1990), acknowledging sound garden performance and ornamental value in cool, maritime conditions where healthy flowering and characterful habit are highly appreciated. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, slightly spreading shrub, typically 100–140 cm tall and wide. Moderately dense, medium-green, slightly glossy foliage; moderately thorny stems. Own-root form develops a stable, full-bodied framework over time. |
| Flower morphology |
Small, flat, very double rosettes with 40+ petals, 1–4 cm across, borne in generous clusters. Remontant habit with a plentiful second flush, creating a lively spray effect across the bush throughout the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft ivory-white at opening, fading to pure snow-white with a creamy hue at the centre. Very good colour retention in typical Irish light, with only slight creamy or pinkish tints in cooler or early-stage blooms. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild yet noticeable fragrance with a soft, muscat-like character. Best appreciated at close range around seating areas, doors or paths where the repeated blooms can be enjoyed without overpowering nearby plantings. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small spherical hips, 6–10 mm in diameter, orange-red when ripe. Primarily ornamental; hips add discreet autumn interest but are not produced heavily under regular deadheading regimes. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Medium resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; benefits from good air circulation and hygiene. Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 3, USDA 6b) for dependable overwintering. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun, in well-drained but moisture-retentive soil; avoid waterlogging. Space 100–110 cm for hedging and mass planting, 180 cm as specimen. Suitable for 40–50 litre or larger containers with quality compost. |
Ausram – white landscape shrub rose - Austin offers cloudlike cluster flowering, a compact, versatile growth habit and long-lived own-root reliability; a thoughtful choice if you would like quiet, enduring beauty in your garden.