WILD ROVER – deep purple park rose - Dickson
Step outside after the rain and let WILD ROVER wrap your garden in a soft, purple glow and fragrance that feels like an old folk song drifting across cottage roofs, its semi-double clusters opening again and again through our short summers, happily remontant so you enjoy colour well beyond June; this upright shrub settles into Irish clay as long as you give it reasonable drainage, thriving even where humidity and showers are frequent, and as an own-root antoniaROSE® ORIGINAL it offers reassuring longevity with the ability to bounce back from winter or pruning so your investment matures year by year — think of it as year one building roots, year two filling out with stronger shoots, and year three revealing its full ornamental character in a front garden, cottage border, or generous 40–50 litre terrace pot.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Cottage-style mixed flowerbed |
The deep purple, semi-double blooms bring romantic colour and a strong, sweet-spicy scent that feels made for cottage borders, weaving easily between perennials and giving repeat flushes with minimal fuss for those who want charm without complexity, beginners. |
| Low-maintenance park or family shrub border |
Its upright, dense habit and medium maintenance rating make it dependable in everyday borders: occasional deadheading and basic disease checks are usually enough to keep a well-shaped, flowering shrub that holds its place for years, busy-owners. |
| Feature shrub in Dublin front gardens |
Used as a single specimen, its height and rich colour read beautifully against brick or pebble dash, giving character to small front gardens without overwhelming the space, especially when spaced well and underplanted with groundcovers, city-gardeners. |
| Informal flowering hedge |
Planted at hedge spacing, it forms a loose, flowering screen that softens boundaries while keeping a natural look; own-root plants regenerate well from harder pruning, helping the hedge stay attractive and serviceable long term, practical-owners. |
| Large containers and terrace pots |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container with good compost and drainage, this shrub rose will give repeat colour and scent near doors or seating areas, ideal where soil is poor or paved, and maintenance stays simple and contained, balcony-owners. |
| Cut flowers from the family garden |
The medium-sized, flat blooms on clusters cut well for casual indoor arrangements, carrying their strong perfume into the house so one shrub can repeatedly supply vases without needing professional cutting or complicated care, home-stylists. |
| Near-natural, relaxed planting schemes |
Its balanced, shrub-like growth and small, occasional hips suit slightly wilder plantings with grasses and perennials, blending structure with a near-natural feel rather than a stiff, formal look that demands constant clipping, nature-lovers. |
| Exposed, rainy Atlantic-facing gardens |
Performs reliably in our changeable, breezy weather, tolerating moist conditions if soil is reasonably open and free-draining so roots do not sit waterlogged, a good fit for coastal-influenced plots with frequent showers, west-coasters. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-contrast – Pair WILD ROVER with Geranium ‘Rozanne’ and soft grasses to echo old Irish cottage borders with relaxed, layered colour – ideal for romantic-border gardeners
- Front-door-focus – Plant one shrub in a 50 litre pot by the front step, underplant with trailing ivy and spring bulbs to greet you with scent and colour – ideal for small-front-garden owners
- Berry-and-bloom – Combine with Prunus laurocerasus ‘Miki’ for evergreen structure, letting WILD ROVER provide seasonal purple flowers against glossy green – ideal for low-maintenance planners
- Purple-drift – Mass-plant along a path at 1 m spacing, edging with thyme or low catmint to create a purple wave that repeats flower through summer – ideal for pathway and driveway designers
- Wild-edge – Use as a loose hedge with Ceanothus and cottage perennials, allowing hips and natural shapes to develop for a relaxed, wildlife-friendly boundary – ideal for nature-first households
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Shrub rose, park type; registered as DIChirap, traded as WILD ROVER – deep purple park rose - Dickson; ARS exhibition name ‘Harry Potter’, exhibition floribunda and shrub rose categories. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Colin Dickson, Dickson Nurseries Ltd, United Kingdom; cross of ‘Spice of Life’ × ‘Rhapsody in Blue’; introduced and registered in 2007, initially distributed by C & K Jones. |
| Awards and recognition |
RHS Award of Garden Merit (2012); Silver Medal at the International Rose Competition, Viña del Mar, Chile (2004); Certificate of Merit, Glasgow Rose Trials (2010), confirming garden reliability. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright shrub 120–180 cm high, 75–125 cm spread, with dense, slightly glossy light green foliage and moderate prickles; moderate self-cleaning, some spent blooms needing removal for best appearance. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, flat, cluster-flowered blooms with 13–25 petals; medium-sized flowers about 4–7 cm across; remontant, producing abundant repeat flushes so the shrub offers colour over an extended season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep crimson-purple base tone with subtle mauve hues; outer petals RHS 60A, inner 71A; buds almost black-purple; flowers lighten to mauve-lilac with pastel edges, holding colour without scorching in hot sun. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Noted for a strong, long-lasting scent with a sweet, spicy character; fragrance is prominent around seating areas or paths, especially in still, humid air, adding a traditional rose atmosphere to the garden. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small spherical hips, 8–13 mm diameter, red RHS 40A; decorative in a subtle way, contributing to a near-natural shrub effect but not generally produced in heavy quantities on every plant. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish Zone 3); moderate resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; flowers well in heat if watered during prolonged dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, hedging, parks and large containers; plant 1 per m² in beds or 90–100 cm apart for hedges; prefers fertile, well-drained soil, tolerates partial shade; occasional pest and disease care advised. |
WILD ROVER – deep purple park rose - Dickson offers rich repeat flowering, evocative fragrance and long-lived own-root resilience, a thoughtful choice if you would like a dependable, characterful shrub in your garden.