LOVE KNOT – red climbing rose – Warner
Along a breezy Cornish veranda or Devon shingle path, Love Knot settles in as a compact, reliable climbing partner that copes well with brisk sea air and helps stabilise borders on exposed sites while still feeling welcoming and light. Its clusters of velvety crimson blooms keep appearing through summer on tidy, medium-height canes, creating a sense of coastal romance without demanding constant attention. Planted in a generously drained bed or a large container of at least 40–50 litres, this own-root climber builds a strong framework that you can easily guide along railings or a pergola. Over time, roots, shoots and flowering structure develop steadily into a long-lived feature, rising from quiet beginnings to full character and lasting structure. Glossy mid-green foliage provides a neat backdrop to the deep red cups, while reliable repeat-flowering adds gentle colour and visual continuity to your everyday garden routines by the sea, keeping the overall look refreshingly low-maintenance for busy households.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda windbreak |
Moderate-height climbing growth and reasonably sturdy canes make Love Knot a good choice for softening wind on balconies or verandas without casting dense shade, especially where a light, airy screen suits coastal lifestyles, for relaxed coastal-style beginners. |
| Compact pergola or arch |
Its 1.8–2.6 m habit suits small family gardens where a full-size rambler would overwhelm; trained over a modest pergola or arch, it creates a welcoming entrance with repeat crimson flowering and manageable pruning for time-poor homeowners. |
| Fence or railing cover |
Clustered medium-sized flowers and self-cleaning blooms keep boundary lines looking smart with less spent-flower removal, while the not-too-thorny canes make tying in along fences or railings straightforward for practical-minded garden owners. |
| Shingle or coastal-style bed |
Performs well where soil is improved for drainage yet still faces regular wind, making it a good fit beside shingle paths with sea kale and grasses, steadily anchoring the planting structure for design-conscious coastal gardeners. |
| Large container on patio (40–50 L+) |
In a 40–50 litre or larger pot with good drainage, its moderate vigour and tidy foliage form an elegant vertical accent by seating areas, offering repeated flushes of red without outgrowing the space, ideal for compact patio-plot users. |
| Long-season colour near seating |
Remontant flowering provides a generous second flush after the first display, so the rose continues to colour your favourite tea spot from early summer well into autumn with relatively light deadheading for lovers of extended-season displays. |
| Low-maintenance family feature |
Own-root plants build up gradually, with early years focused on root strength and later seasons on fuller flowering, giving a stable, regenerative structure that copes better with accidental damage for busy family-garden planners. |
| Decorative hips and winter interest |
Occasional small red hips add a discreet touch of structure and colour after flowering has slowed, helping the plant remain visually relevant in the colder months as a subtle backdrop for winter planting schemes for detail-loving coastal enthusiasts. |
Styling ideas
- Shell-Path Arch – Train Love Knot over a small arch above a shingle path, underplanting with sea kale and Festuca to echo coastal dunes – ideal for seaside-walk lovers.
- Harbour Veranda Screen – Grow in a 50-litre container against veranda railings, pairing with lavender-filled pots to filter sea breezes – for balcony owners wanting privacy without heaviness.
- Crimson Fence Ribbon – Space several plants along a sunny fence, weaving stems horizontally for a ribbon of red blooms with Heuchera at the base – suited to neat, easy-care family boundaries.
- Tea-Corner Pergola – Let Love Knot climb a compact pergola above a bistro set, with Coreopsis threading light yellow through the crimson – perfect for afternoon tea drinkers after garden calm.
- Winter-Glow Panel – Fan-train along a wall panel, keeping the framework tidy so glossy foliage and red hips stand out beside evergreen Bupleurum – for gardeners who value quiet seasonal structure.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Miniature climbing rose, registered as CHEWglorious, marketed as Love Knot; exhibition miniature climber suitable for cluster cut flowers and small-scale vertical garden features. |
| Origin and breeding |
Raised by Christopher H. Warner from ‘Laura Ford’ × ‘Ingrid Bergman’; introduced in 2000 by Warner’s Roses in the UK, later distributed in New Zealand by Tasman Bay Roses. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the RHS Award of Garden Merit (2012), confirming strong garden performance, and gained Best Climber at the Hamilton New Zealand Rose Trial Station in 2014. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Climbing habit, approximately 1.8–2.6 m high with 0.6–1 m spread; moderately dense, glossy mid-green foliage on slightly thorny stems, forming a tidy, trainable framework. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped flowers with about 13–25 petals; medium-sized clusters on side shoots; remontant, with a notably abundant second flush following the main early-summer display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Velvety crimson-red petals, ARS mr, RHS 53A–53B; buds ruby with darker tips, colour deepens then lightens slightly in strong sun, maintaining a rich, luminous red overall. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak and only slightly sweet; flowers are primarily chosen for colour and form, with limited appeal to pollinators due to semi-double form and reduced stamen access. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small, spherical red hips about 6–10 mm across; modest but noticeable ornamental effect, adding light seasonal interest rather than heavy fruiting displays. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Medium resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b), with average heat tolerance and need for summer watering. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best on sunny fences, walls, posts or pergolas at 45–85 cm spacing; improve drainage on heavy clay, water in summer heat, and provide light, regular pruning to renew flowering wood. |
Love Knot Climbing rose CHEWglorious offers compact climbing height, long-season crimson flowering and a steady own-root framework; a thoughtful choice if you would like a lasting, manageable vertical accent.