MORDEN RUBY™ – pink bedding shrub rose
Picture the soft crash of waves and a cup of tea on a sheltered veranda as MORDEN RUBY™ settles into your coastal garden, its bushy form naturally helping to steady soil and planting in exposed, breezy spots. This compact shrub rose offers generous, repeat flowering in rich raspberry-pink clusters, yet remains reassuringly straightforward to grow in an average family garden. Own-root planting supports a long-lived display with reliable regrowth if wind or weather knock it back, so you can plan your borders with quiet confidence. In the first year it concentrates on roots, the second on leafy framework, and by the third year it usually reaches its full ornamental impact. Ideal for shingle or mixed beds with sea kale and grasses, it thrives in larger pots on sunlit verandas where drainage is sound and watering is simple to manage. Low care, lasting colour, coastal charm, strong structure, own-root resilience, compact habit, repeat flowering, reliable performance.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small coastal front garden bed |
MORDEN RUBY™ forms a bushy, medium-height shrub that fits neatly into small front gardens, giving plenty of flower without overwhelming paths or windows, ideal where space is limited for beginners. |
| Wind-exposed shingle border |
The solid, well-branched structure helps visually anchor planting in breezy, seaside conditions, pairing well with sea kale and ornamental grasses to suggest natural dunes for coastal-style lovers. |
| Low-maintenance family flower bed |
Medium maintenance needs and moderate self-cleaning keep deadheading and spraying to a sensible level, so you enjoy colour with only occasional tidy-ups, suiting busy homeowners. |
| Season-long veranda container (40–50L+) |
In a 40–50 litre or larger pot with good drainage, its compact spread and repeat blooming create a long, steady season of colour beside seating and doors, rewarding but manageable for urban balcony owners. |
| Coastal hedge or edging line |
Planted at the recommended spacing, the dense, thorny framework knits into a low hedge that gently shapes paths and boundaries, remaining tidy and structural for many seasons for practical garden planners. |
| Mixed border with grasses and perennials |
The raspberry-pink clusters repeat through the season, weaving colour among Festuca, Lavandula and sea kale, giving refreshing contrast without constant replanting for colour-focused gardeners. |
| Long-lived focal shrub near seating |
As an own-root shrub it rebuilds from the base if stems are damaged, supporting a long lifespan and stable ornamental value around terraces and benches for long-term planners. |
| Clay soil family garden bed |
Once established in improved but heavier soil, its shrub habit and root system help it cope with wet spells and breezy days typical of coastal family plots, giving reliable structure for UK coastal gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Seaside-Veranda Pairing – place MORDEN RUBY™ in a 50L tub with pale gravel mulch, adding pots of sea kale and blue Festuca for a breezy, beachside feel – ideal for coastal-style lovers.
- Raspberry-Ribbon Border – run a loose line along a path, underplant with silver foliage and soft pink perennials to echo its repeat blooms – suited to family gardeners seeking gentle structure.
- Clay-Garden Anchor – use as a focal shrub in improved clay, with Cornus kousa behind and low grasses in front, to hold the scene together year-round – perfect for practical homeowners.
- Soft-Hedge Screen – plant at hedge spacing to frame a seating nook, combining with scented honeysuckle on a trellis for summer privacy – appealing to veranda tea-drinkers.
- Pollinator-Path Mix – intersperse clusters of MORDEN RUBY™ with lavender and coastal perennials to offer colour and some insect interest along a sunny walkway – great for relaxed, wildlife-minded gardeners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
MORDEN RUBY™ bedding shrub rose, shrub / bed rose group, horticultural bush rose; trade name Morden Ruby™, bred by Marshall, used mainly as a flower bed and landscape shrub. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Henry H. Marshall at Agriculture Canada, Morden Station, from ‘Fire King’ × (‘J.W. Fargo’ × ‘Assiniboine’); bred 1964, introduced and registered 1977. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, moderately dense shrub reaching about 85–115 cm high and 105–135 cm wide; glossy dark green foliage, moderately thorny shoots, well suited to beds, edging and informal low hedging. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped flowers, 13–25 petals, medium-sized clusters on branching stems; repeats reliably with abundant second flush, moderate self-cleaning so occasional deadheading is helpful. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep raspberry-pink to ruby tone (RHS 53A–53B) with speckled lighter edges; buds rich cyclamen-pink, blooms soften to dusty rose and pearly margins, colour moderates faster in strong sun. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very weak, discreet fragrance, not a scent-focused variety; better chosen for colour, shape and garden structure than for perfume, suitable where strong fragrance is not required. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate numbers of small, spherical orange hips, around 7–11 mm across; offers subtle autumn interest without dominating the plant’s overall appearance. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Exceptionally hardy to about −40 to −37 °C (RHS H7, USDA 3a); black spot resistant with medium tolerance to powdery mildew and rust; moderate heat and drought tolerance with watering in dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Prefers sunny sites with well-drained soil; medium maintenance, occasional plant protection helpful. Recommended spacing 110–180 cm depending on use, planting density around 0.7–0.8 plants/m². |
MORDEN RUBY™ offers compact structure, repeat flowering and long-lived own-root reliability in coastal or family gardens, making it a thoughtful choice if you seek dependable colour with modest effort.