FAIRY ROUGE – red groundcover rose - Moore
Imagine coming home from the Cornish coast, dropping a handful of seashells on the table and sitting down with tea while a low, ruby-red carpet of blooms ripples in the breeze: FAIRY ROUGE is a compact, spreading rose that brings refreshment and a subtly salty seaside mood to small gardens and verandas. Its polyantha-style clusters flower over a long season, giving reliable colour with modest care, while its own-root form quietly builds a long-lived framework and offers natural renewal after harsher weather. Well-suited to breezier plots where the soil needs good drainage and anchoring against coastal wind, it settles into borders, shingle pockets or large containers without fuss. Year by year it strengthens – first forming roots, then building shoots, and by the third summer showing its full ornamental impact with an easy-going, family-friendly habit that keeps your garden feeling gently sunny.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Low groundcover in family flower beds |
The naturally spreading, low habit quickly knits over bare soil, softening edges and covering awkward gaps without dominating nearby perennials, ideal where you want dependable colour but limited height for beginners. |
| Coastal-style shingle and gravel planting |
Its compact, anchoring growth fits between pebbles and cobbles, creating red cushions that echo beach berries while coping well as long as drainage is good and watering tops up dry spells for coastal-garden owners. |
| Large containers on a sheltered veranda |
Planted in a 40–50 litre pot, it forms a cascading mound of small double blooms that frame seating areas beautifully, with modest pruning and deadheading keeping the display neat for busy-veranda users. |
| Front-of-border edging and low hedging |
Regular spacing along a path creates a low, continuous ribbon of red that outlines beds all summer, remaining dense and tidy with only occasional shaping, suiting those who prefer clear structure for family-home gardeners. |
| Mixed planting with drought-tolerant companions |
Pairing with sea kale, Festuca and lavender lets its medium-red clusters sit against silver foliage and grasses; with moderate water needs it integrates well into light, coastal-style schemes for design-conscious owners. |
| Informal children’s play-area borders |
The modest height and fine-textured clusters read as friendly rather than imposing, framing lawns or play corners while staying low enough to preserve sightlines, helpful for relaxed spaces used by young-families. |
| Long-season colour with minimal complexity |
Remontant flowering provides waves of blossom from early summer onwards; light routine deadheading keeps it performing, so you gain months of colour without advanced pruning knowledge for time-poor gardeners. |
| Stable, long-lived feature planting |
As an own-root shrub it regenerates well after harsher seasons and gradually forms a durable base that copes with exposed family gardens where soil structure and anchoring against wind matter to low-maintenance seekers. |
Styling ideas
- Shell-Edged Path – line a shingle path with FAIRY ROUGE at regular intervals, letting its red cushions spill slightly onto gravel, perfect for coastal-walk lovers seeking a seaside feel at home – target audience: coastal-style homeowners
- Veranda Cradle – plant three roses in a 50 litre trough with Festuca and trailing thyme to create a soft, wind-kissed frame around outdoor seating – target audience: balcony and veranda users
- Ruby Carpet – mass-plant in a shallow arc at the front of a mixed border, underplanting taller roses or shrubs to form a glowing understorey – target audience: hobby gardeners wanting structure without hedging
- Play-Corner Border – curve a low ribbon of FAIRY ROUGE along lawn edges, mixing in low bugle and aubretia for a friendly, colourful outline – target audience: families with small children
- Container Quartet – arrange four large pots with individual plants around a terrace, combining with sea kale and lavender for movement, scent and long-season colour – target audience: busy urban gardeners
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Groundcover rose, polyantha group; registered as MORedfar, marketed as FAIRY ROUGE / Red Fairy, exhibition polyantha and low edging plant for beds and containers. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Ralph S. Moore at Sequoia Nursery, Visalia, California, United States; introduced and registered in 1995, with parentage unrecorded in available cultivar documentation. |
| Awards and recognition |
American Rose Society rating 8.2 points in the Polyantha category, reflecting consistent garden performance and ornamental value under a range of amateur growing conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Low, widely spreading shrub reaching about 60–95 cm in height and 90–140 cm spread, with dense, slightly glossy light- to mid-green foliage and a moderately thorny framework. |
| Flower morphology |
Small, double ball-shaped pompon blooms, 0.5–1.5 inches across, borne in clusters; 26–39 petals per flower; remontant habit with a particularly generous second flush in favourable seasons. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Medium-intensity scarlet red (RHS 46A–46B), vivid when opening with slight lightening at petal edges; may pale a little in strong sun, remaining deeper and richer in cooler conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Delicate, sweet fragrance that is very weak and barely perceptible in normal garden use; primarily selected and grown for visual impact rather than for scented-rose collections. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose-hip set usually light due to the double flowers; small spherical hips approximately 6–9 mm across, developing orange-red to red tones when present late in the season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to around −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4); disease resistance moderate to black spot, mildew and rust; appreciates watering in prolonged heat and protection from spring frosts. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions; suitable for beds, borders, containers and groundcover. Plant 80–150 cm apart depending on use, with 1.2–1.4 plants/m² for mass effect, and maintain moderate protection and deadheading. |
FAIRY ROUGE offers compact groundcover colour, long-season flowering and steadily regenerating own-root growth, making it a dependable choice for relaxed coastal-style gardens and sheltered verandas you plan to enjoy for years.