IDA KLEMM – white rambler climbing rose – Walter
If you dream of a romantic, “girly” cottage look without demanding upkeep, Ida Klemm gives you clouds of snow-white flowers and soft green shade with reassuringly easy care. This historic rambler calmly covers fences, pergolas and Dublin terrace front walls while coping well with our cool summers and periods of rainfall and humidity. Semi-double blooms with golden centres appear in generous clusters, followed by bright red hips that add colour into late season. Grown on its own roots, it builds a stable framework that endures for decades, quietly regenerating after pruning or winter knocks so you spend less time fixing and more time enjoying. Plant once, then watch the first year focus on roots, the second on confident new shoots, and by the third season it settles into full, storybook character around your family garden.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Cottage-style front garden climber on a low terrace house facade |
The lax, rambling growth lets you train it around doorways, railings or porch pillars, creating a soft white frame without precise clipping. Once established, pruning is occasional rather than intensive, suiting time-poor town gardeners and gentle beginners. |
| Family garden pergola or arch for summer shade |
With 360–600 cm height and dense, glossy foliage, it clothes arches and pergolas to cast a dappled, green-white light that feels cool and inviting. Its own-root longevity means the structure will stay reliably covered for many seasons for relaxed homeowners. |
| Long boundary fence or side-return screening |
The 240–400 cm spread and repeat summer flowering make it ideal for softening long runs of fencing, giving an informal hedge effect that still feels airy. You gain privacy, flowers and red hips with moderate maintenance for practical gardeners. |
| Romantic mixed border backdrop in a small to medium garden |
Medium-sized, clustered blooms and dark foliage sit beautifully behind perennials like foxgloves and bellflowers, adding height without a harsh wall of stems. Its semi-double flowers draw some insect interest, supporting nature-minded buyers. |
| Traditional Irish cottage garden with peonies and foxgloves |
Snow-white clusters and red hips match old-fashioned planting schemes perfectly, echoing early 1900s gardens. Colour holds well from bud to fall, so scenes stay photogenic even in damp spells, keeping borders charming for nostalgic romantics. |
| Covered walk or green tunnel in larger family plots |
The vigorous rambler habit lets you span simple timber frames over paths, forming a light green tunnel to stroll under in flower. Once the long canes are tied in, yearly tidying is usually enough for relaxed walkers. |
| Wall-trained rose on sunny gable or garage wall |
Thriving best in full sun, it can be fan-trained on wires to soften bare masonry and highlight windows. Medium disease resistance and winter hardiness to about -20 °C offer steady performance even with Atlantic-weather swings valued by practical planners. |
| Feature rambler for long-term, low-replacement planting |
As an own-root rambler, it regenerates from the base after hard pruning or storm damage, avoiding graft-failure worries and supporting a long planting life; ideal when you want to plant once and enjoy for decades as thoughtful investors. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Archway – Train Ida Klemm over a simple wooden arch with foxgloves and peach-leaved bellflowers beneath for a soft, white-and-lilac entrance – perfect for romantic front-garden owners.
- Peony Partner – Let its snow-white clusters rise behind fragrant peonies, echoing their early-summer show while adding height and gentle repeat bloom – ideal for scent-loving cottage gardeners.
- Clothed Fence – Run wires along a boundary fence and weave the long canes through, underplanting with hardy geraniums for weed-suppressing ground cover – suited to busy family gardens.
- Walkway Tunnel – Space two simple timber rails each side of a path and train Ida Klemm up and over, with shade-tolerant perennials along the edges – appealing to those who enjoy immersive garden walks.
- Heritage Corner – Combine this 1906 rambler with old-style perennials and a painted bench against a sunny wall to create a storybook sitting nook – attractive for lovers of vintage character.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Ida Klemm – white rambler climbing rose – Walter; rambler, Hybrid Multiflora group; exhibition climbing rose; unregistered cultivar, ARS exhibition name ‘Ida Klemm’. |
| Origin and breeding |
Sport of ‘Crimson Rambler’, bred by Louis Walter in France, 1906; first distributed by Peter Lambert in Germany; traditional heritage rambler with historic garden value. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Strong, lax-branched rambler reaching about 360–600 cm high and 240–400 cm wide; dense, glossy dark green foliage with moderate thorns; best trained on supports, pergolas or walls. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double goblet-shaped flowers, around 4–7 cm, typically 13–25 petals; produced in clustered inflorescences; remontant with a lighter second flush after the main early-summer flowering. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Snow-white petals with silk-like sheen; inner RHS 155C, outer 155D; buds greenish-white, opening bright white, then gently ivory; colour retention very good, clusters covering the plant in season. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, discreet scent with a light, fresh character; not overpowering near doors or windows; suitable for paths and family seating areas where a gentle background fragrance is preferred. |
| Hip characteristics |
Moderately abundant, spherical rose hips, roughly 6–10 mm diameter, bright red RHS 45B; follow the white flowers to extend ornamental interest into autumn and early winter in family gardens. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Medium disease resistance overall; good resistance to powdery mildew, medium to black spot and rust; hardy to about -21 to -18 °C (H7, USDA 6b), suiting most Irish garden conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with well-drained soil; allow space of 220–400 cm depending on use; ideal for pergolas, fences, walls and park planting; use sturdy supports and consider a 40–50 litre container minimum if pot-grown. |
IDA KLEMM offers romantic white clusters, long-term coverage and discreet scent on a resilient own-root rambler framework; a thoughtful choice if you wish to plant once and enjoy its character for many years.