UNCLE WALTER – scarlet-red park rose – McGredy
Bring a touch of stately elegance to your Irish cottage or Dublin terrace with Uncle Walter, a vigorous shrub rose that shrugs off coastal breezes and frequent showers, thriving even where rainfall is a regular feature. Its tall, upright structure and glossy dark foliage create a lush, green backdrop for large, velvety scarlet blooms that repeat reliably from summer onwards, giving months of rich colour with minimal fuss. As an own-root rose, it builds strength from below, settling in steadily so you can enjoy solid performance and long-term reliability without complex pruning. Over time it develops into a handsome, long-lived garden feature, just as suited to a relaxed, “girly” cottage border as to a smart, urban front-garden statement. With room to grow and simple, well-drained soil preparation, this hardy companion will reward light-touch care year after year.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Feature shrub in a small to medium front garden |
Uncle Walter’s tall, upright habit and dense, glossy foliage create instant presence without needing intricate pruning, giving your front garden a bold yet tidy focal point that continues to develop character each season for the style-conscious homeowner. |
| Romantic cottage-garden border |
The large, velvety scarlet blooms repeat generously through the season, weaving rich colour through perennials and grasses and helping to maintain a romantic, “girly” cottage feel with relatively low upkeep for the busy but fragrance-curious beginner. |
| Informal flowering hedge along a boundary |
With its vigorous growth and recommended spacing of around one metre, Uncle Walter lends itself well to an informal hedge, forming a flowering, leafy screen that matures steadily and offers long-lived structure for privacy-seeking families. |
| Specimen rose in a mixed shrub bed |
The strong vertical lines and XL flowers make an excellent specimen among lower shrubs and evergreens, allowing you to anchor the planting design while relying on the rose’s durable framework and long-term presence for design-conscious home gardeners. |
| Large container on a sunny patio (40–60 litres) |
Planted in a generously sized, well-drained container, Uncle Walter will still express its bold blooms and upright habit, while the own-root form gives reassuring resilience and easier renewal over time for urban patio and balcony gardeners. |
| Cut-flower source near the house |
The high-centred, long-stemmed blooms are ideal for cutting, bringing that velvety scarlet into the kitchen or sitting room without sacrificing the overall display on the plant for home decorators and casual flower arrangers. |
| Low-climbed form on an arch or sturdy obelisk |
Its vigorous, upright canes can be lightly tied to an arch or obelisk, suggesting a low climber that frames a path; in Ireland’s cool, damp summers this creates a welcoming tunnel of repeat colour for design-led cottage and terrace gardeners. |
| Back-of-border anchor in a family garden |
As an own-root shrub that builds roots first, then top growth, you can expect it to bulk up steadily over its first few years while coping well with regular Irish showers and damp conditions for practical-minded family gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Scarlet – Combine Uncle Walter with soft pinks, whites and airy perennials to create a romantic, storybook cottage border – ideal for lovers of traditional, “girly” country style.
- Urban-Edge – Pair its bold red flowers with slate paving, grasses and compact evergreens for a sharp but low-maintenance front garden – suited to busy city homeowners.
- Green-Privacy – Use a loose row of plants along a boundary, underplanted with sedges and low yarrow, to form a flowering screen – perfect for families wanting softness instead of hard fencing.
- Patio-Showpiece – Grow Uncle Walter in a 50-litre terracotta pot with trailing herbs at the base for scent and texture – great for balcony and patio gardeners with limited ground space.
- Arch-Drama – Train the strong stems over a metal arch, weaving in clematis for contrast and extended colour – appealing to design-focused gardeners seeking a dramatic entrance.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Shrub rose cultivar Uncle Walter, registered as a park rose with XL blooms; approved exhibition name and trade name both Uncle Walter across relevant rose registers. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Samuel Darragh McGredy IV from ‘Detroiter’ × ‘Heidelberg’, raised in New Zealand in 1959 and introduced via Samuel McGredy & Son, Nurserymen in 1962. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised internationally with the Nord-Rose Award in Scandinavia and a Gold Medal in Copenhagen, reflecting solid garden and exhibition performance over time. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous, upright shrub reaching around 240–340 cm high and 90–160 cm wide, with moderately thorny stems and dense, dark green, glossy foliage lightly tinged bronze when young. |
| Flower morphology |
Double, high-centred blooms with 26–39 petals, extra-large flowers over 10 cm wide, borne mostly in clusters, and repeating strongly with an abundant second flush in season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep scarlet-red flowers with velvety sheen; buds darken then open vivid scarlet, holding colour reasonably well in sun and remaining particularly rich in cooler weather. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak and of neutral character, so the rose is chosen for colour impact and form rather than scent, suiting areas where strong perfume is not desired. |
| Hip characteristics |
Moderate crop of small, bright red, ovoid hips about 9–15 mm across, adding seasonal autumn interest and a subtle wildlife food source where flowers are left un-deadheaded. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Good overall disease resistance, particularly to black spot and powdery mildew; hardy to around -15 °C (RHS H6), coping reliably with typical Irish winters in most gardens. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny, well-drained soil; water during prolonged dry spells, deadhead for tidiness, and allow ample spacing for height and spread when used as hedge or specimen. |
UNCLE WALTER offers bold scarlet flowers, strong structure and reassuring disease resistance on a long-lived own-root plant, making it a thoughtful choice for gardeners seeking lasting impact with modest effort.