CORNELIA – peach-pink park rose - Pemberton
Imagine afternoon seabreeze and sunshine on a sheltered Cornish veranda: CORNELIA settles in calmly, forming a bushy, romantic shrub that copes gracefully with coastal wind and careful watering management. Its warm peach-pink clusters repeat flower generously from early summer, with a strong, sweetly musky fragrance that drifts through open doors and around family seating areas. Own-root reliability means a long-lived, steady partner for your shingle border or balcony pot, quietly rebuilding after harsh weather. Plant once, then watch root, shoot and full display unfold over three relaxed seasons, creating a soft-focus, girly backdrop to everyday life by the sea.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Coastal family garden shrub border |
CORNELIA forms a bushy, upright, slightly arching shrub that anchors mixed borders without overwhelming smaller gardens, bringing long-season colour and refined structure ideal for relaxed, breezy spaces – a reassuring choice for beginners. |
| Salt-tolerant, sheltered veranda containers |
In a large 40–50 litre container, this own-root shrub rose copes well with breezy, light-sheltered verandas, its dense foliage and medium height creating privacy and a soft windbreak for tea and reading corners – especially suited to busy-owners. |
| Romantic “girly” seating corner |
The peach-pink rosette clusters and warm pastel tones give an instantly romantic, feminine feel around bistro sets or garden benches, pairing beautifully with soft textiles and pale gravel for an effortlessly pretty nook – perfect for coastal-stylists. |
| Long-season flowering focal point |
Remontant and floriferous, CORNELIA produces generous clusters in flushes from summer well into autumn, offering dependable colour when many shrubs fade, with minimal deadheading needed for a tidy look – ideal for time-poor-gardeners. |
| Fragrant path or veranda edge |
The strong, sweetly musky, tea-toned scent carries beautifully in mild coastal air, making it a natural choice beside doors, along paths or under windows where every breeze brings noticeable perfume – rewarding for scent-lovers. |
| Low-maintenance, long-lived structure |
As an own-root shrub, CORNELIA ages steadily without graft problems, regenerating from its base after hard pruning or tough winters and maintaining ornamental value for many years with simple annual trimming – reassuring for long-term-planners. |
| Wind-resilient, semi-exposed positions |
The dense, dark-green foliage and medium height help it stand up to typical coastal breezes when given reasonable shelter, while its branching habit offers reliable cover even after rough spells, supporting everyday comfort for family-gardeners. |
| Mixed planting with coastal perennials |
Its pastel peach-pink clusters harmonise with sea kale, blue fescues and lavender in well-drained clay-loam, creating a calm, beach-inspired palette that thrives where careful water management keeps roots happy – a natural fit for designer-hobbyists. |
Styling ideas
- Seaside-Veranda – Plant CORNELIA in a 50 litre clay pot with blue Festuca and lavender around the rim for a breezy, scented sitting area – for coastal veranda owners seeking calm colour.
- Pastel-Hedge – Use at 90 cm intervals as a low, informal hedge along a path, underplanted with honesty and foxgloves for soft, cottage-style screening – for families wanting privacy with charm.
- Shingle-Corner – Set one specimen in a shingle bed with sea kale and silver foliage perennials, echoing the beach while keeping maintenance light – for coastal-style lovers with small gardens.
- Romantic-Pergola – Train a few arching stems onto a light frame or veranda post, letting clusters hang at nose level, mixed with feverfew for a lacy effect – for gardeners who enjoy gentle structure.
- Twilight-Tea – Place near a patio table where its fragrance drifts through evening air, teamed with pale cushions and lanterns for a softly lit, “girly” retreat – for busy people who unwind outdoors.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
CORNELIA is a historic hybrid musk park shrub rose sold on own roots; ARS exhibition name Cornelia, unregistered cultivar, offered here as a 2-litre vivianaROSE ORIGINAL plant. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by the Reverend Joseph Hardwick Pemberton at The Pemberton Nursery, Romford, Essex, United Kingdom; introduced in 1925 and distributed in Britain by Pemberton Nursery. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit (1993), signalling proven garden performance, ornamental value and reliability across a range of typical UK conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Medium shrub 120–180 cm high and wide, upright yet slightly arching and bushy, with dense, glossy dark-green foliage and relatively sparse prickles suited to family gardens. |
| Flower morphology |
Very full, rosette-shaped, medium-sized flowers with more than 40 petals, borne in large, graceful clusters; remontant with abundant second and later flushes in the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Warm peach-pink, ARS PB, RHS 36D outer and 38C inner; buds coral-peach, blooms lighten to silvery pink, with cream-tinted centres and golden stamens, deeper in cool autumn. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, distinctive perfume combining sweet musk and tea notes; double rosettes reveal stamens when fully open, offering only moderate value for pollinators in most gardens. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose hips are usually absent; occasionally small spherical orange-red hips 8–12 mm may form, adding a modest decorative accent but not a major feature of the cultivar. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4); disease resistance is medium to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, requiring standard preventive care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to borders, hedges, park and specimen use, pergolas or walls; prefers well-drained soil, regular watering in drought, and moderate annual pruning to renew flowering wood. |
CORNELIA offers long-season peach-pink clusters, strong musky fragrance and wind-resilient, own-root longevity in compact family gardens and veranda pots, making it a thoughtful choice for relaxed coastal planting.