HARDWELL – peach-coloured climbing rose – Harkness
Let Hardwell bring a soft coastal glow to your veranda or shingle retreat, its peach‑cream blooms catching the light like seashells after a breezy walk. This award‑winning climber combines reliable flowering with a calm, sweet‑fruity fragrance, so you can enjoy “tea in a windbreak” moments without demanding upkeep. On its own roots it settles steadily, promising a long‑lived, easily managed structure that anchors well even where strong winds meet the garden. Once established, it copes reassuringly with blustery coastal weather and thoughtful watering on heavier soils, so there is little more to do than occasional tying‑in and light pruning. Over the first three seasons roots, then shoots, then a full curtain of colour develop naturally into lasting ornamental value.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda windbreak |
As a tall, dense climber, it quickly clothes railings or a light trellis, softening onshore breezes while remaining manageable in height. Once established, it copes well with gusty coastal conditions and careful watering on heavier soils, suiting coastal-style lovers. |
| Family garden pergola |
The generous height and medium spread make it ideal for pergolas where you want summer shade and a romantic overhead tunnel of peach blooms. Its own-root vigour supports a long life, so the structure fills and matures predictably for family garden owners. |
| Wall or fence cover |
Regular flowering flushes and glossy dark foliage create a refined, tidy backdrop along boundaries. With moderate maintenance – mainly tying in and light deadheading – it offers a stable, long-term vertical accent that suits busy homeowners. |
| Arch over a path |
The manageable flower size and clustered sprays give a soft, romantic look without overwhelming narrow spaces. Its climbing habit and repeat blooming allow a welcoming arch that develops year by year, appealing to small-garden beginners. |
| Large container on terrace |
In a minimum 40–50 litre container with good drainage, it performs well as a statement climber for sheltered patios or balconies. Own-root resilience means it recovers reliably from pruning and winter, reassuring urban veranda gardeners. |
| Cut flowers from the garden |
The cup-shaped, very double blooms and long stems lend themselves to vases, where their sweet, fruity scent can be enjoyed indoors. Regular cutting encourages further buds, turning a single plant into a season‑long source for home flower arrangers. |
| Partial-shade side passage |
Its tolerance of partial shade allows planting where sun hours are limited, such as along a north-east wall that still receives some morning light. Reliable structure and foliage mean it remains attractive between flushes for practical planners. |
| Seasonal structure with hips |
After flowering, the attractive orange-red hips add subtle autumn interest, especially when trained against a pale wall or among grasses. This extended season of value from one planting makes it well suited to low-maintenance gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Seaside-Veranda Screen – Train along a balcony balustrade with blue-grey Festuca and pots of sea kale for a breezy Cornish feel – ideal for coastal-style lovers.
- Romantic-Pergola Walk – Let it climb a timber pergola, underplanted with soft lavender and catmint to echo its peach tones – perfect for relaxed family gardens.
- Shingle-Courtyard Nook – Grow in a large container on shingle, paired with silver-leaved herbs and lanterns for evening scent – suited to beginners wanting impact.
- Elegant-Fence Backdrop – Cover a boundary with its glossy foliage, fronted by Japanese sedge and pale hydrangeas for year-round texture – for tidy, low-fuss spaces.
- Pathway-Arch Welcome – Train over an arch with climbing hydrangea nearby, creating layered bloom and autumn hips – attractive for home entertainers.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Large-flowered climbing rose; registered as HARdwell, marketed as Hardwell Climbing rose HARdwell, with Penny Lane as the American Rose Society approved exhibition name. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Robert B. Harkness (R. Harkness & Co. Ltd., UK) from ‘Anne Harkness’ × ‘New Dawn’; bred before 1997 and introduced in 1998 by Harkness Roses in the United Kingdom. |
| Awards and recognition |
RHS Rose of the Year 1998, RHS Award of Garden Merit 2001, Geneva Rose Trials Gold Medal 2001, and UK Gold Standard rating 2008, confirming dependable garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Strong climbing habit, around 280–420 cm high and 120–200 cm wide, with dense, dark green glossy foliage and moderate prickliness; self-cleaning is partial, so some deadheading is beneficial. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, very double, cup-shaped blooms with over 40 petals, typically borne in clusters of 3–5 per stem; remontant, with a main flush followed by smaller repeat flowerings through the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Delicate warm peach with creamy base; buds honey-champagne with pink tinge, opening to peach-cream and fading towards champagne-white; good colour retention, though faster fading in hot conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Pronounced sweet, fruity rose fragrance that is clearly noticeable in the garden and on cut stems; blooms are mainly ornamental but offer moderate appeal to visiting pollinators where accessible. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate quantities of small, 8–12 mm ellipsoidal orange-red hips with decorative value in autumn and early winter, adding a neat seasonal extension to its ornamental interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Good general disease resistance, with strong tolerance to powdery mildew, moderate black spot resistance and rust resistance; hardy to about −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7; Swedish zone 4; USDA 5b). |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to walls, fences, arches, pergolas and large containers; medium maintenance with occasional plant protection; space 140–225 cm apart, allowing air movement and access for tying-in and pruning. |
HARDWELL – peach-coloured climbing rose - Harkness offers reliable flowering, a sweet fruity scent and durable structure on an own-root plant that will mature gracefully over years, making it a thoughtful choice for your next garden project.