GLORIANA – mauve climbing rose – Warner
Step out your front door and meet Gloriana as it climbs and twines, showering walls and pergolas in mauve blooms that glow in soft Irish light. This miniature climber is bred for reliability, taking Atlantic breezes and frequent showers in its stride while rewarding you with a generous, repeat display from summer into autumn. Semi-double flowers invite visiting bees, their mild fragrance drifting close to the house without overwhelming small spaces. On its own roots, this rose settles in for the long term, quietly building a strong framework that copes well with ordinary family-garden life. Plant once, then enjoy the gentle rhythm of Year 1 roots, Year 2 shoots, Year 3 full ornamental presence, with only light pruning and feeding to keep it in top shape. Ideal for relaxed, “girly” cottage style and smart Dublin terraces, it offers both longevity and easy-going charm for gardeners who prefer pleasure over work.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front-garden arch or pergola by the entrance |
Miniature-sized blooms on a compact climbing frame create a welcoming veil of colour that does not swamp smaller Irish front gardens, yet offers real vertical impact close to the door – ideal for the beginner. |
| Cottage-style boundary fence in a family garden |
Its healthy, glossy foliage and repeat-flowering clusters quickly soften timber or wire fencing, giving that informal cottage feel while remaining easy to manage at 2–3 m height – reassuring for the busy. |
| Dublin terraced-house façade or railings |
The narrow spread and controllable canes suit tight urban plots, dressing plain brick or railings with mauve and rosy-lilac tones without blocking light to ground-floor windows – appealing to the urbanite. |
| Large container on patio, balcony or small yard |
In a sturdy 40–50 litre container with good drainage, this own-root climber forms a durable, movable feature for rented or paved spaces, offering years of colour with simple seasonal feeding – perfect for the renter. |
| Pollinator-friendly vertical accent near seating |
Semi-double blooms give moderate access to pollen, encouraging bees to browse at eye level while the mild rosy scent stays gentle enough for close seating areas – attractive to the nature-lover. |
| Low-maintenance rose for wetter, wind-exposed spots |
Robust disease resistance and solid hardiness mean it copes well where frequent rain and cool breezes might trouble fussier roses, maintaining clean foliage with minimal spraying – reassuring for the pragmatist. |
| Long-term feature for young family gardens |
Own-root growth gives a stable, long-lived framework that recovers well after accidental knocks or occasional neglect, maturing slowly into a reliable backdrop for everyday play – ideal for the family. |
| Showpiece for enthusiasts who value colour nuance |
The shifting shades from vivid mauve-crimson to silvery-pink add subtlety across the season, rewarding those who enjoy observing colour changes along with the plentiful second flush – satisfying for the connoisseur. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-arch romance – Train Gloriana over a simple timber arch with foxgloves and soft pink campanulas at the base for a dreamy, “girly” cottage entrance – for homeowners who love storybook charm.
- City-terrace vertical – Fan the canes along narrow trellis on a Dublin terrace front, underplanting with dwarf Artemisia and small grasses for a neat yet romantic street-side statement – for stylish urban gardeners.
- Mauve-and-cream calm – Pair its rosy-mauve blooms with creamy Echinacea ‘Delicious Nougat’ and white violas in front, creating a soothing, long-flowering palette – for those seeking gentle relaxation corners.
- Evergreen backdrop – Grow against a backdrop of Ilex crenata globes and clipped box-style shapes to contrast glossy foliage and mauve clusters with structured evergreen forms – for fans of refined structure.
- Patio-pergola nook – Let Gloriana climb a compact pergola over a bench in a small patio, with pots of lavender and herbs nearby for scent layering and pollinator interest – for people who unwind outdoors after work.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Miniature climbing rose from the Rós dreapadó group; registered as CHEwpope, marketed as Gloriana climbing rose CHEwpope, also exhibited as Gloriana 97 in show contexts. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Christopher H. Warner in the United Kingdom from ‘Laura Ford’ × ‘Big Purple’; introduced and registered in 1997 by Warner’s Roses Ltd., Newport, Shropshire. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised with UK Breeders’ Choice in 1998 and a Certificate of Merit at the New Zealand National Rose Trials in 1999, confirming strong garden performance and ornamental appeal. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Climbing habit reaching about 200–320 cm in height and 90–160 cm spread, with moderately thorny canes and dense, glossy dark green foliage that clothes supports attractively from low down. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped flowers with 13–25 petals, small in size at 1–4 cm, produced mainly in clusters; remontant, with a plentiful second flowering that extends the overall display period. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vivid mauve with crimson undertone, ARS mp; outer petals RHS 67A, inner 68B. Colour fades through mid mauve-crimson to rosy-lilac, then to silvery-pink tints as blooms age on the plant. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, soft rosy fragrance best appreciated at close range, adding a gentle scent without overpowering nearby seating or doorways; not primarily a perfume rose but a pleasantly scented climber. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate quantities of ellipsoidal rose hips, 10–14 mm in diameter, coloured orange-red around RHS 40A, providing additional late-season interest and some wildlife value when left unpruned. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated hardy to approximately -21 to -18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7, Swedish zone 3); resistant to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, supporting low-input care in typical Irish garden conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best on fences, walls, pergolas, obelisks or in 40–50 litre containers; plant 140–150 cm apart, or 250 cm as a specimen, in well-drained soil with mulch to protect roots and maintain steady moisture. |
GLORIANA – mauve climbing rose - Warner combines compact climbing growth, repeat clusters of mauve blooms and own-root resilience for long-term, low-fuss structure; a thoughtful choice if you want lasting colour with minimal effort.