AUSMOL – yellow English rose – Austin
Imagine returning from the beach to sit with afternoon tea, sheltered from the breeze by a low screen of softly glowing yellow roses: AUSMOL brings that coastal, sun-warmed calm into your own garden with romantic clusters of rich, rosette blooms, an easy, compact habit and season-long colour that holds well in sun and salt-tinged air, gently brightening shingle beds and verandas exposed to sea winds yet easy to manage in containers from 40–50 litres or in narrow borders, where its medium maintenance needs are straightforward even for newer gardeners; as an own-root rose it offers reassuring longevity, steady regeneration after harsher weather, reliable flowering year after year and a gradual, rewarding build-up of impact as roots establish in year one, shoots strengthen in year two and by year three it settles in as a full, glowing feature of your family garden windbreak.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda in 40–50 litre containers |
AUSMOL’s upright, compact structure suits large pots on breezy Cornish or Devon balconies, where regular watering and drainage are easier to manage than in open clay soil. Its reliable yellow display brings gentle structure and low-effort charm for the relaxed coastal-style beginner. |
| Front-of-border in small family gardens |
The medium height and dense foliage allow AUSMOL to sit neatly at the front or mid-front of mixed borders without overwhelming nearby perennials, providing romantic colour and clear form with only occasional dead-heading and health checks for the time-pressed homeowner. |
| Low, informal hedge along a path or drive |
Planted at hedge spacing, its upright habit and repeated flushes of rosette blooms create a softly structured, informal barrier that defines paths yet stays welcoming, ideal where you want garden order without rigid lines, particularly appreciated by the relaxed family-gardener. |
| Wind-sheltered seating nook or tea corner |
Cluster-flowered, repeatedly blooming stems frame a bench or bistro set with long-season colour and light tea-musk fragrance, making even a small seating nook feel special without demanding complicated pruning, suiting the comfort-seeking tea-lover. |
| Coastal shingle bed with sea kale and grasses |
Its heat tolerance and moderate care needs pair well with drought-resilient companions such as sea kale and Festuca, creating a bright focal point in shingle beds that cope gracefully with salt-tinged breezes in typical British coastal plots for the design-conscious seaside-resident. |
| Mixed container group on a sheltered patio |
Used as the taller element in a trio of large pots, AUSMOL offers vertical interest and romantic yellow flowers above lower herbs or grasses, while the own-root form gives long-term stability and easy renewal if top growth suffers, reassuring the cautious urban-gardener. |
| Feature plant near an entrance or gate |
Planted as a specimen at recommended distance, it forms a welcoming focal point with repeated, rosette flowers and neat foliage that reads well from the street, yet its medium maintenance needs remain manageable for the schedule-limited but style-aware householder. |
| Border section exposed to rain and prevailing winds |
The balanced, upright framework and good heat tolerance help AUSMOL remain orderly and floriferous in spots that regularly catch Atlantic rain and wind, provided soil drainage is improved, making it a steady choice for the practicality-minded coastal gardener. |
Styling ideas
- Coastal-Hedgerow – line a low hedge of AUSMOL along a shingle path, softening it with sea kale and Festuca for a relaxed, wind-brushed seaside look – ideal for coastal-style enthusiasts seeking structure without formality.
- Veranda-Romantic – one AUSMOL in a 50 litre tub flanked by lavender pots creates a golden and mauve frame for a bistro set – perfect for balcony owners wanting long-season colour with minimal fuss.
- Family-Frontage – plant AUSMOL by the front gate with rosemary and Crocosmia for year-round presence and high-summer glow – suited to busy families who like a welcoming entrance that largely looks after itself.
- Patio-Trio – combine AUSMOL with a blue fescue grass and a silver-leaved herb in three matching containers to give height, sparkle and texture – a good choice for small patio owners wanting impact from limited space.
- Tea-Corner – tuck AUSMOL behind a wooden bench, underplanted with low grasses, for a sheltered spot where repeated blooms and gentle scent frame afternoon tea – ideal for gardeners who favour calm, quietly romantic spaces.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
AUSmol, marketed as AUSMOL – yellow English rose – Austin; English Rose Collection shrub, romantic rose group, ARS exhibition name ‘Molineux’, verified authenticity for premium garden use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by David C.H. Austin in the United Kingdom from ‘Graham Thomas’ × unnamed seedling; selected and introduced by David Austin Roses Ltd. in 1994 for English garden and landscape planting. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holder of the RHS Award of Garden Merit (2001), plus multiple international trial medals including the President’s International Trophy and golds at Glasgow and Durbanville, confirming reliable ornamental performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy shrub 80–130 cm high and 70–120 cm wide, with dense dark green, slightly glossy foliage and only light prickliness, forming a compact, well-filled framework suitable for borders, hedging and containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, very full, rosette-shaped blooms with over 40 petals, produced mainly in clusters; remontant with a notably abundant second flush, giving a long, repeat flowering season under normal garden care. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Golden-yellow petals shifting to butter and lemon tones; buds deep yellow with orange hints, colour lightening slightly in strong sun yet richer in cooler weather, providing a lively, variable yellow display through the season. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild yet distinct fragrance combining tea and light musk notes; discreet enough for seating areas and small patios, offering a gentle background scent rather than a powerful, room-filling perfume in warm weather. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set generally low due to very double blooms; where present, small 6–10 mm spherical hips in orange-red RHS 40A may appear late season, but they are not a major ornamental or wildlife feature of this cultivar. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 4, USDA 5b); disease resistance is medium, requiring some monitoring and timely treatment, with good tolerance of summer heat when adequately watered. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to borders, containers, low hedges and specimen use; allow recommended spacing, protect from late spring frosts, water regularly in drought, and ensure well-drained soil, especially on heavier clays or coastal plots. |
AUSMOL brings compact English rose charm, repeated golden flowering and proven award-winning reliability in a long-lived own-root form that gradually settles into your garden, making it a thoughtful choice for enduring coastal or family spaces.