GOLDEN WINGS – yellow wild rose – Shepherd
Picture tea on a sheltered veranda after a breezy shoreline walk: Golden wings of colour lifting the garden, even where air is salty and soils need careful drainage to cope with winter wet. Golden Wings forms an upright, airy shrub with dense, light green foliage and softly glossy leaves, carrying large, single blooms that open a vivid golden yellow before gently fading to cream. Its simple flower form offers easy landing pads for bees, creating a truly pollinator-friendly corner beside shingle, gravel or decking. As an own-root rose it settles in for the long term, building roots in year one, stronger shoots in year two and full ornamental presence by year three, so your coastal-style space feels quietly established, reliable and welcoming with very little effort.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Coastal family flowerbed near a seating area |
Large, single golden blooms and a softly upright habit give a bright, relaxed focus beside a terrace or veranda, while own-root vigour supports a long-lived, low-fuss framework for family spaces, reassuring for busy beginners. |
| Wind-exposed, salt-tolerant front garden |
The sturdy shrub structure and good heat and drought tolerance suit breezier, drier front plots, and the rose copes well where salty air and wetter winters demand better-drained ground, an advantage for coastal-style homeowners. |
| Free-standing specimen in lawn or gravel |
Its height and airy spread create a graceful focal point that reads clearly from windows or a garden bench, with self-cleaning flowers keeping the outline tidy without constant deadheading, appealing to time-poor gardeners. |
| Mixed wildlife-friendly border |
The open, pollen-rich flowers are highly accessible to bees and butterflies, and moderate hip production adds late-season interest if blooms are left, making it an attractive choice for nature-aware families. |
| Loose, informal hedge or boundary line |
Dense foliage, upright growth and moderate height help to define boundaries without feeling stark, and spacing at hedge distances quickly knits into a natural screen that suits relaxed, cottage-coastal gardens. |
| Large container on a sheltered veranda or patio |
In a 40–50 litre planter with good drainage, Golden Wings offers generous flowers in a compact footprint, while the own-root system regenerates well after pruning, ideal for small-space balcony or veranda owners. |
| Clay-based borders improved for drainage |
Once planted into clay that has been opened up with grit and compost, the strong own-root system anchors well and steadily fills its space, reducing the need for replacements and suiting long-term-minded planners. |
| Urban green spaces and community gardens |
Medium maintenance needs, reliable repeat flowering and proven award-winning performance make this shrub a sound choice where volunteers share care duties and prefer robust, forgiving plants, reassuring community organisers. |
Styling ideas
- Beachfront glow – Underplant with blue Festuca and sea kale for a dune-inspired, shingle look that echoes Cornish and Devon shores – ideal for coastal-style enthusiasts.
- Veranda drift – Grow in a large tub beside outdoor seating, letting arching stems frame the view and provide relaxed colour from spring to autumn – perfect for compact patio owners.
- Pollinator lane – Combine with Calamintha ‘Blue Cloud Strain’ and airy grasses to create a softly buzzing path-edge that children can safely observe – suited to wildlife-focused families.
- Sunset hedge – Plant a loose line along a drive with lavender and sea thrift at the base, giving an informal, fragrant boundary that glows in evening light – for homeowners wanting easy structure.
- Meadow edge – Set a small group in long grass with rock cress and bee balm nearby, bridging lawn and wilder planting with gentle colour – attractive to hobby gardeners experimenting with naturalistic styles.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Golden Wings, a wild-type Hybrid Spinosissima shrub rose marketed as a park and landscape shrub; American Rose Society exhibition name Golden Wings, unregistered but long-established in gardens. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Roy Eustace Shepherd in the United States in 1956 from ‘Soeur Thérèse’ × (Rosa pimpinellifolia ‘Altaica’ × ‘Ormiston Roy’); first distributed commercially by Bosley Nursery, USA. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recipient of the American Rose Society Gold Medal in 1958 and the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit in 1993, confirming reliable garden performance over many decades. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, medium-tall shrub reaching about 150–220 cm in height and 130–200 cm spread, with dense, light green, glossy foliage and relatively sparse thorns, forming an airy yet substantial framework. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, flat, single to semi-double flowers with 5–12 petals, usually borne in clusters; bloom size around 2.75–3.95 inches, self-cleaning, with good repeat flowering and an abundant second flush in season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Flowers open a vivid golden yellow (RHS 11A–11B), then lighten in strong sun to soft cream-yellow, maintaining a pure, radiant effect that blends well with coastal palettes and pale, reflective hard landscaping. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Features a mild but noticeable rose fragrance that complements, rather than overwhelms, seating areas; simple blooms with exposed stamens offer both scent and accessible pollen to visiting insects. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate numbers of egg-shaped, orange hips 14–22 mm across, which develop best if spent flowers are not removed, adding discreet autumnal interest to more naturalistic plantings. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated hardy to about −32 to −29 °C (USDA 4b, RHS H7, Swedish Zone 5); good tolerance to heat and moderate drought, with black spot resistance and medium susceptibility to powdery mildew and rust. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Thrives in full sun with well-drained soil; medium maintenance with occasional plant protection in humid years; suitable for hedges, specimen use, park plantings and urban greens, spaced 90–165 cm apart. |
Golden Wings offers large golden flowers, pollinator-friendly simplicity and reliable, long-lived own-root growth in gardens and containers, making it a thoughtful choice if you value easy structure and gentle coastal character.