OPEN ARMS – pink climbing-rambling rose - Warner
Like a soft shower on a summer evening, OPEN ARMS wraps your garden in a feeling of gentle welcome, its airy clusters of pastel pink blooms dancing in the breeze and coping calmly with blustery coastal winds and frequent showers typical of much of Ireland. This compact climber is wonderfully easy to enjoy: its remontant flowering keeps colour coming in waves, and its self-cleaning habit means spent blooms largely tidy themselves. Grown on its own roots for dependable longevity and quiet resilience, it settles in steadily and matures without drama. Light, classic rose fragrance and bee-friendly pollinator blooms make it a natural choice for cottage-style or terraced front gardens, where you want charm without fuss. From the first season’s root-building to stronger shoots in the second year and full ornamental presence by the third, OPEN ARMS offers relaxed, evolving beauty and everyday ease in even a small family garden.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small Irish front garden or Dublin terrace |
OPEN ARMS stays relatively compact for a climber, making it ideal where space is tight but you still want vertical colour and a friendly welcome by the gate or front door. It offers a soft, cottagey look with minimal pruning for beginners. |
| Low-maintenance family pergola or arch |
With naturally good disease resistance and a self-cleaning habit, this rose needs little more than occasional tying-in and basic feeding to cover an arch or light pergola, suiting time-poor but style-conscious homeowners. |
| Bee-friendly cottage border |
The open, semi-double flowers expose pollen-rich stamens that attract bees and other pollinators, so it slips easily into wildlife-friendly plantings where you’d like romance, movement and nature in harmony for nature-lovers. |
| Relaxed country-style fence or railing |
Its repeat flowering and pastel pink clusters soften hard boundaries through the season, while own-root growth ensures stable coverage and the ability to regenerate if cut back, supporting long-term structure for planners. |
| Container on patio or balcony (large pot) |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container, OPEN ARMS can be trained up a trellis or obelisk, bringing height and gentle colour to paved spaces with only moderate feeding and watering, ideal for busy urban balcony-gardeners. |
| Partially shaded wall or side passage |
This variety tolerates partial shade, so it can brighten those side-return walls and alleyways that only see sun for a few hours, offering reliable flowering and greenery where many plants struggle for problem-solvers. |
| Coastal or windswept suburban garden |
Its robust foliage and healthy constitution handle exposed spots, while its climbing habit makes it easy to train along sheltered wires, giving enduring colour in gardens that contend with strong winds and frequent rain for coastal residents. |
| Long-term, low-fuss garden investment |
Own-root vigour, strong disease resistance and remontant blooming mean this rose is designed for years of service with modest care, suiting gardeners who want stable, evolving beauty rather than high-maintenance stars for thoughtful buyers. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Arch – Train OPEN ARMS over a simple metal or timber arch, underplanting with creeping thyme to scent the path – ideal for romantic front-garden dreamers.
- Soft-Fence – Let it ramble loosely along wires on a low fence, mixing with low yarrow and blue verbena for an airy, wildlife-friendly tapestry – perfect for relaxed nature gardeners.
- Patio-Obelisk – Grow it in a 50 litre pot with an obelisk, pairing with pastel herbs for fragrance and easy clipping – suited to balcony and courtyard dwellers.
- Shady-Glow – Brighten a part-shaded side wall by combining OPEN ARMS with variegated foliage plants below, creating gentle contrast and depth – appealing to subtle-style enthusiasts.
- Family-Pergola – Cover a light pergola post with OPEN ARMS, leaving clear space beneath for children’s play, while nearby yarrow and thyme invite bees – great for family-focused gardeners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Miniature climbing rose, registered as CHEWpixcel, marketed as Open Arms Climbing rose CHEWpixcel; American Rose Society exhibition name Open Arms, premium bronze cultivar rating. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Christopher H. Warner, United Kingdom, from ‘Mary Sumner’ × ‘Laura Ashley’; breeding completed 1991, introduced and registered in 1995 through Warner’s Roses. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the RHS Award of Garden Merit (2001) and RNRS Certificate of Merit (1993), confirming reliable performance, garden value and dependable ornamental display in varied conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Climbing habit with moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage, height about 200–320 cm, spread 120–200 cm, moderately thorny canes and good natural self-cleaning of spent blooms. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped clusters of small flowers 1–4 cm, around 6–15 petals per bloom, remontant with a good second flush, though later flowering is lighter than the main summer display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Delicate pastel pink blooms, mid-pink outer petals with softer creamy centres, lightening towards whitish around stamens; colour softens in strong sun, stays more vivid in cooler conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Light, classic rose scent that adds a gentle note rather than overwhelming the garden; enough perfume for close appreciation along paths, arches and seating areas without being dominant. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate quantities of small, spherical red hips, 8–12 mm in diameter, colour around RHS 40A, contributing subtle seasonal interest and potential food for birds in autumn. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated hardy to about –21 to –18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7), with good resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; tolerates heat and moderate drought with watering in prolonged dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to pergolas, fences, arches, containers and specimen use; plant 160 cm apart in mass, 150 cm for hedging, 240 cm as specimens; tolerates partial shade and needs only basic, low-intensity care. |
OPEN ARMS offers easy, disease-resistant climbing colour, bee-friendly blooms and long-lived own-root reliability, making it a thoughtful choice for gardeners seeking gentle impact with modest effort.