| Front-garden focal point by the door |
This medium climber reaches about 140–220 cm with a bushy habit, giving welcoming height without overpowering a small Dublin terrace frontage. Its warm orange to peach-yellow clusters stand out against brick or render, while the medium-strength fragrance greets you as you pass, ideal for fragrance-loving city homeowners who enjoy easy structure, especially beginners. |
| Cottage-garden arch or low pergola |
The combination of repeat flowering and large, high-centred blooms creates a romantic arch that feels abundant even in our shorter Irish summers. With spacing of around 90 cm as a specimen, it will clothe an arch in glossy, dark green leaves and glowing flowers, suiting hobby gardeners seeking a traditional cottage look, particularly homeowners. |
| Informal flowering hedge along a path |
Planted at about 50 cm for hedging, this variety forms a loose, colourful boundary that remains permeable to light. Its moderate disease resistance and medium maintenance needs keep care straightforward, while remontant flowering ensures good colour through the season, fitting those who want a soft boundary with limited upkeep, notably families. |
| Mixed border with perennials in heavy soil |
Sunrise copes well when planted in improved heavy clay, provided you give it decent drainage and a mulch layer to manage wet spells, which suits typical Irish garden conditions with steady rainfall and moisture-retentive ground. The bright orange clusters pair well with blues and whites, appealing to nature-oriented gardeners planning resilient borders, especially planners. |
| Feature shrub near a patio seating area |
Used as a free-standing shrub at roughly 90 cm spacing, its semi-double, large flowers and medium fragrance create a cosy, cheerful setting for evening chats. The bushy, well-foliaged framework gives year-round structure, and own-root growth supports long-term reliability with less worry about rootstock suckers, perfect for busy yet quality-conscious owners. |
| Training on a low fence or railing |
With a spread of 60–120 cm and flexible shoots, Sunrise can be guided along a low fence to soften boundaries and bring colour at eye level. Repeat flowering means gaps are quickly refilled after the first flush, and moderate prickliness keeps it manageable to tie in, matching those who want neat, colourful edging without specialist skills, such as starters. |
| Large container on a sunny terrace |
In a generously sized pot of at least 40–50 litres, this climber provides vertical interest where borders are not possible. The own-root form supports a long lifespan in containers, with steady regeneration from the base if canes are damaged by weather, fitting urban gardeners who value durable investment planting with simple seasonal care, particularly apartment-dwellers. |
| Long-term structural planting in family gardens |
Once established, the shrub-like framework and moderate hardiness (to about -18 °C) deliver dependable structure and flowering over many years, particularly when pruned lightly and watered regularly in dry spells. Its remontant habit ensures colour returns after each flush, ideal for families wanting a stable, long-lived rose that gradually becomes part of the garden’s character, especially long-term-keepers. |