PAUL NOËL – salmon-pink rambler climbing rose - Tanne
Step out your back door and let PAUL NOËL wash your walls, arches, and pergolas in clouds of softly glowing, salmon-pink blossom – a romantic cottage feel that instantly softens brick and timber. This classic rambler brings a strong, fruity fragrance you notice with every breeze, echoing the easy cheer of an Irish summer evening. Bred over a century ago yet still awarded the RHS AGM, it offers reassuring reliability and medium-care maintenance that suits today’s busy home gardens. Its glossy mid-green foliage gives a generous coverage of fences and pergolas, while remontant flowering means a second wave of bloom after the first flush. Own-root planting supports a long-lived, regenerating framework that settles in steadily – roots in year one, strong shoots in year two, and full ornamental value by year three – and copes confidently with cool, damp Irish spells and frequent rainfall.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Pergola or walk-through arch in a family garden |
Ideal where you want a romantic tunnel of colour with scented clusters overhead; its medium maintenance suits gardeners who like a seasonal tidy rather than weekly fussing, and glossy foliage gives generous cover for family seating areas – perfect for the busy beginner. |
| Sunny or lightly shaded house wall |
The long, flexible canes of this rambler can be fan-trained along wires or trellis, creating a classic Irish terrace frontage while the remontant habit gives a welcome second flush after the main summer show, supporting season-long interest for the urban homeowner. |
| Freestanding rose arch in a small front garden |
Its medium-sized, rosette blooms and strong fruity scent create a soft, “girly” welcome at the garden gate; own-root plants mature steadily into a long-lived structure that repays simple annual tying-in and light pruning for the style-conscious gardener. |
| Screening along a fence at the back of the garden |
With a spread up to 4,5 m, PAUL NOËL quickly covers plain boundaries, and the dense mid-green foliage gives a leafy backdrop even between flower flushes, helping to create privacy and a gentle, enclosed feel for the family-focused buyer. |
| Romantic cottage-garden rose mixed with perennials |
The warm salmon-pink tones blend beautifully with soft yellows and airy companions like lady’s mantle or baby’s-breath, giving that relaxed cottage look while its strong scent adds another layer of charm for the fragrance lover. |
| Partial-shade side path or narrow passage |
Tolerant of partial shade, this rambler brings colour and perfume to those tricky, not-fully-sunny spots; remontant flowering keeps the effect going even where summer is short and the light is softer, offering reliable pleasure for the shaded-garden owner. |
| Large container on a patio with a robust support |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container with good drainage, it can be trained up an obelisk or pillar, bringing height and scent close to seating; own-root vigour helps it recover well if ever cut back harder than planned for the balcony-and-patio gardener. |
| Feature rose for classic, long-term garden structure |
The RHS Award of Garden Merit signals trusted garden performance, while own-root planting supports a long lifespan and stable ornamental value in typical Irish conditions of cool air and regular rain showers, rewarding patience for the quality-seeking buyer. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Archway – Train PAUL NOËL over a simple metal arch, underplant with Alchemilla mollis and soft pink perennials to create a storybook entrance – for romantically minded cottage-garden owners.
- Dublin Frontage – Use along railings or a slim wall, paired with clipped cherry laurel for structure and frothy Gypsophila repens at the base – for city terrace gardeners wanting softness without clutter.
- Evening Retreat – Cover a pergola by a seating area so the strong, fruity fragrance hangs in the air at dusk, backed by simple green shrubs – for those who relax outdoors after work.
- Soft Screen – Let it ramble along a back fence with light training, mixing in pale perennials to echo the fading salmon-pink blooms – for families seeking a gentle, leafy privacy screen.
- Statement Container – Plant one own-root specimen in a 50 litre pot with an obelisk, adding trailing underplanting to dress the base – for renters or balcony gardeners wanting movable romance.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic | Data |
| Name and registration |
Rambling climbing rose marketed as PAUL NOËL – salmon-pink rambler climbing rose - Tanne; ARS exhibition name Paul Noel; unregistered cultivar, in the climbing rose collection. |
| Origin and breeding |
Historic French rambler bred by Rémi Tanne around 1910, introduced 1912; parentage Rosa wichuraiana × ‘Monsieur Tillier’, combining vigour with old-world flower form and colour. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit, indicating reliable garden performance, good ornamental value and sound health under ordinary garden conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Strong, climbing rambler with long, flexible canes; height about 320–520 cm, spread 280–450 cm; dense, glossy mid-green foliage and moderate prickliness, suitable for training. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized double rosette blooms, 4–7 cm across, typically borne in corymbs; 26–39 petals; remontant, with a good main flush followed by a lighter secondary flowering. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Warm salmon-pink flowers with a delicate yellow eye; buds medium-deep salmon, ageing to pastel pink with creamy tones; colour holds well then softens rather than scorching in sun. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Notable strong fragrance with a fresh, fruity character clearly detectable in the garden; especially effective where flowers are near paths, doors or seating areas for enjoyment. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small ovoid hips 6–10 mm, orange-red when ripe; ornamental but not produced in heavy quantities due to the full, double flower form with covered reproductive parts. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to around −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b); disease resistance moderate to main foliar diseases, generally satisfactory with basic hygiene and, if needed, light treatment. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best on pergolas, arches, walls or fences with strong support; spacing 210–385 cm depending on use; tolerates partial shade; water in drought and provide well-drained soil. |
PAUL NOËL brings fragrant salmon-pink abundance, reliable repeat flowering and impressive wall-covering vigour on a durable own-root framework; if you enjoy romantic structure with manageable care, this rambler is well worth choosing.