AUSLEVEL – white English rose – Austin
Imagine a sheltered coastal veranda where you can enjoy late-afternoon tea after a walk on the beach, surrounded by softly billowing, snow-white blooms of romance and sea-spray freshness. This compact English shrub rose fits beautifully into small family gardens and balcony spaces, thriving in containers or mixed borders where dependable flowering matters more than complicated care. Its vigorous own-root habit supports a long-lived structure that settles in securely even where breezes are brisk and soil may need improved drainage. Highly scented, myrrh-toned flowers bring a sense of calm luxury to everyday seating areas, while shade tolerance helps preserve the cool white colour through bright coastal summers. Planted once, it will typically focus on roots in the first year, build strong shoots in the second, and from the third year deliver its full ornamental impact.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small coastal veranda container (40–60 litre) |
A naturally compact, bushy habit and moderate height make this rose ideal for a single feature container on a veranda, where it is easier to water regularly and protect from spring frosts. One large pot creates a simple yet refined focus for beginners. |
| “Girly” seating nook near the house |
The pure white, pompon-like blooms and strong, myrrh-style fragrance create a soft, romantic backdrop beside a bench or bistro set, especially in partial shade where the petals keep their cool tone. This suits a relaxed corner designed for homeowners. |
| Coastal-style shingle bed with grasses |
Planted into improved, free-draining pockets among shingle, it forms a bushy anchor that pairs beautifully with low ornamental grasses and sea-kale, standing up well where wind and rain are frequent along exposed UK coasts. This layout appeals to coastal-garden enthusiasts. |
| Low, fragrant hedge by a path |
Regular spacing along a front path or garden boundary builds a low, scented hedge that repeats flower through the season; own-root plants knit together steadily to give a long-lived, unified line. This is attractive for practical-minded garden planners. |
| Mixed border with perennials in partial shade |
Its tolerance of partial shade means it can be woven into existing borders beneath light tree cover, keeping colour where many roses would struggle, while dense foliage helps fill mid-border gaps. This option suits established-border gardeners. |
| Feature rose in a family lawn island bed |
In a small circular or oval island bed, one or three plants create a strong focal point, offering repeat flushes of bloom with manageable maintenance; occasional deadheading keeps flowers coming. This arrangement benefits busy family-garden owners. |
| Cut-flower corner near the kitchen door |
The very full, medium-sized blooms with intense fragrance are excellent for cutting in short stems for jugs indoors, and having a dedicated clump beside the house makes snipping convenient between other tasks. This works well for time-pressed rose lovers. |
| Sheltered urban courtyard or patio |
In enclosed spaces with reflected heat, its moderate height and bushy habit avoid overwhelm, while own-root resilience supports a long lifespan with sensible watering and light seasonal pruning. This fits compact outdoor rooms for city-based residents. |
Styling ideas
- Coastal Veranda Pot – one rose in a 50–60 litre container with pale gravel mulch and a low ring of sea kale or Festuca for a beach-walk feel – ideal for coastal-style balcony owners.
- Romantic Shingle Bed – group three plants in a triangle on shingle, threaded with dwarf Pennisetum and white sea thrift to echo surf and foam – suited to homeowners near the sea.
- Tea-Corner Border – plant beside a small bistro set, with lavender and soft pink hardy geraniums to frame the white blooms and fragrance – perfect for those who enjoy quiet afternoon tea.
- Family-Friendly Hedge – create a low hedge along a path, backed by grasses and summer bulbs, giving structure without blocking views – for families wanting order with low upkeep.
- Shaded Courtyard Glow – place in partial shade with hostas and ferns so the flowers appear luminous against deeper greens – appealing to urban gardeners with cool, enclosed patios.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Modern shrub English Rose from the English Rose Collection, registered as AUSlevel, marketed as Glamis Castle / Auslevel, ARS exhibition class modern shrub rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by David C. H. Austin (UK) from ‘Graham Thomas’ × ‘Mary Rose’; introduced and distributed by David Austin Roses Ltd in 1992 after UK breeding work completed in 1991. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised in US rose society shows as a Modern Shrub Rose, including awards from Rhode Island, Tampa and Warren Rose Society Shows in 2001, confirming strong exhibition potential. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub reaching about 75–115 cm high and 80–120 cm wide, with dense mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickles; spent blooms usually need manual removal to stay neat. |
| Flower morphology |
Very full, globular to pompon-type blooms with more than 40 petals, produced mainly in small clusters of one to three flowers per stem, repeating well with abundant second flushes in season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure snow-white flowers with subtle creamy and ivory tones toward the centre; good colour retention in partial shade, though strong sun may scorch petals; buds open from pale creamy white. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Distinct, very strong myrrh-type scent that carries well in still air, giving a classic English Rose perfume suited to seating areas and cut flowers, particularly noticeable near paths or doors. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally low because of very double blooms, but occasional small spherical red hips, around 9–16 mm across, may develop if flowers are left uncut toward the end of the season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3, USDA 6b); disease resistance moderate overall with good black spot resistance but some susceptibility to powdery mildew and rust. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in well-drained soil with regular watering in dry spells; suitable for beds, hedging, edging, specimens, and containers from 40 litres upward; benefits from deadheading and frost protection. |
AUSLEVEL offers compact, romantic white blooms with powerful fragrance and steady repeat flowering on a resilient own-root shrub, making it a graceful long-term choice for smaller gardens and patios; consider it if you value calm, enduring beauty.