ALEXANDER MACKENZIE – pink climbing rose – Svejda
Along breezy Cornish and Devon verandas, ALEXANDER MACKENZIE lends a calm, raspberry-pink backdrop for your coastal retreat, with upright, easily trained stems that create a gentle wind-filtering screen and cope well with exposed, salty air near the sea. Its mid-sized, very double blooms open in generous clusters for a long flowering season, bringing clearly noticeable, fruity fragrance to shingle patios and small family gardens where space must work hard. In our pharmaROSA® ORIGINAL 2-litre own-root format, this climber establishes steadily, offering a reassuring lifespan as it rebuilds from the base if cut back or weather damaged. With sensible watering, simple feeding and basic cleaning of old flower-heads, you can expect strong roots in the first year, confident framework shoots in the second, and full ornamental impact by the third, all with a relaxed maintenance rhythm that fits easily around busy coastal family life.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Small coastal veranda climber |
A compact, upright climber that can be kept to modest height on a trellis or wire frame, giving a vertical curtain of raspberry-pink blooms without overwhelming a balcony or veranda space; ideal for those wanting easy colour in tight spots, especially beginners. |
| Wind-filtering garden screen |
Once tied into sturdy supports, the dense foliage and branching help diffuse sea breezes, softening gusts without creating a solid wall, so seating areas remain airy yet sheltered for tea after a beach walk, suiting coastal households seeking comfort for families. |
| Season-long focal arch or doorway |
The remontant habit and abundant second flush provide repeated flower clusters, allowing an arch or entrance to stay decorative from early summer into autumn with limited pruning, a benefit for time-poor gardeners who still value long-display planting, including newcomers. |
| Own-root long-term feature rose |
Supplied on its own roots, this rose develops from a stable root system that supports regrowth from the base after hard pruning or winter damage, giving a robust, long-lived structure that suits owners wishing to invest once for many years of display, particularly homeowners. |
| Clay-soil family boundary planting |
In many UK gardens with heavier soils, a well-prepared, freely draining planting hole lets the vigorous root system anchor securely while the upright habit forms a colourful boundary; with regular feeding and mulching, it becomes a reliable, structural presence for gardeners. |
| Fragrant seating-area companion |
The medium-strength, fruity scent carries well in still evening air, so training it along a bench, pergola or low balcony rail adds gentle perfume close to where people sit, ideal for those prioritising sensory relaxation rather than intensive gardening, especially couples. |
| Large container or half-barrel rose |
When planted in a 40–50 litre container with good drainage and regular watering, its upright form and repeat flowering turn patios or roof terraces into vertical flower corners, offering flexible placement for renters or anyone unable to plant into open soil, notably balconies. |
| Textured cluster-flowered backdrop |
The globular, very double, mid-sized blooms carried in clusters read as a soft, raspberry-pink haze from a distance, providing a neat, textural backdrop that complements coastal-style perennials and grasses in shingle or mixed borders, appealing to design-minded coastal stylists. |
Styling ideas
- Veranda Screen – Train ALEXANDER MACKENZIE on slim wires behind bistro chairs to create a light, flowering wind-filter that frames sea views and morning coffee – perfect for coastal veranda owners seeking soft privacy.
- Shingle Drift – Plant at the back of a shingle bed with sea kale and blue Festuca, letting the raspberry-pink clusters rise above silver foliage and pebbles – suited to gardeners building a relaxed, beach-inspired scheme.
- Romantic Arch – Use two plants to cover a simple metal arch, underplant with Lavandula and low Campanula to echo cottage charm beside a front path – ideal for families wanting a welcoming, long-flowering entrance.
- Patio Barrel – Grow a single plant in a 40–50 litre half-barrel with free-draining compost and trailing Liriope at the base for movement and texture – a good option for renters or small-terrace dwellers.
- Structured Hedge – Space plants along a boundary fence and tie stems laterally to form an informal flowering hedge, with Pachysandra in front to knit the base – attractive for homeowners seeking a defined yet romantic border.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Current trade name ALEXANDER MACKENZIE – pink climbing rose – Svejda; ARS exhibition name A. Mackenzie; climbing shrub rose group; marketed here as a 2-litre own-root garden climber. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Felicitas Svejda at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa, from ‘Queen Elizabeth’ × (‘Red Dawn’ × ‘Suzanne’); introduced and registered in 1985. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Strong, upright climbing growth reaching about 180–300 cm high and 150–250 cm wide, with dense mid-green, glossy foliage and moderate prickles; spent blooms persist and need occasional manual deadheading. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, globular pompon blooms with over 40 petals, medium-sized at roughly 4–7 cm across, freely produced in clusters; remontant, with a generous second flush after the main early summer flowering. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Intense raspberry-pink, with scarlet overtones and darker carmine buds; may lighten toward pink in strong sun; colour shows cool purplish nuances in shade, giving depth and interest through the flowering period. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Clearly detectable, medium-strength scent with a delicately fruity character best appreciated near seating; full flowers limit stamen access, so it serves mainly as an ornamental rather than a pollinator plant. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasionally forms ovoid orange-red hips around 15–25 mm in diameter; hips are sporadic rather than heavy, adding a discreet seasonal accent rather than a dominant late-season display. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Extremely hardy (RHS H7, USDA 3b, to about −37 to −34 °C) but with low disease resistance, needing regular preventive care against black spot, powdery mildew and rust, especially in damp or crowded plantings. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; space 140–220 cm depending on use; suit for parks, hedging, borders and climbing uses; ensure good air circulation and consistent plant protection for healthy growth. |
ALEXANDER MACKENZIE offers upright, space-efficient climbing growth, repeat raspberry-pink flowering and long-lived own-root resilience, making it a considered choice for those shaping a relaxed coastal-style family garden.