NEW DAWN – pale pink climbing rose – Bosenberg
Bring a sense of seaside refreshment to your garden with New Dawn, a time-tested climbing rose that copes well with brisk coastal winds and typical UK summer showers, settling steadily into pergolas, fences and house walls. Its repeat-flowering habit means months of soft, shell-pink blooms, while the moderately strong, fruity fragrance drifts through your veranda seating area like air after a passing shower. As an own-root plant, it offers reassuring longevity and dependable regrowth even after harder pruning, making it well suited to busy gardeners who want structure without fuss. Give it a well-drained spot with a supportive structure and, over three seasons, you will see roots establish, then vigorous shoots, and by the third year a full, romantic canopy of flowers. Ideal for Cornwall and Devon-style, shingle-inspired spaces, it partners beautifully with sea kale, Festuca and lavender, creating a gently sun-bleached coastal ambience you can enjoy with a cup of tea after collecting seashells, while its easy-care nature supports a relaxed family-garden lifestyle.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda windbreak |
Trained along a rail or frame, New Dawn’s vigorous climbing growth quickly forms a soft, flowering screen that takes the edge off coastal gusts yet stays elegant rather than imposing, ideal for a relaxed, sheltered seating corner for beginners. |
| Small family garden pergola |
In modest British back gardens, its tall yet reasonably narrow habit makes excellent vertical use of space, clothing a pergola with pale, romantic flowers over a long season and leaving ground room free for children’s play areas and herbs for homeowners. |
| House wall or garage façade |
Against a sunny or lightly shaded wall, this climber anchors well and covers unsightly surfaces with foliage and repeat blooms, requiring only occasional tying-in and light pruning, a manageable way to transform plain brickwork for busy-gardeners. |
| Shingle or gravel border backdrop |
Planted in improved soil behind shingle paths or gravel seating spots, it brings height and softness while coping with reflected heat and breezy conditions, echoing relaxed Cornish coastal planting in an easy-care way for coastal-lovers. |
| Part-shaded side path |
New Dawn tolerates partial shade, so it will still flower reliably on a side return or east-facing fence, brightening those in-between spaces that many roses dislike, useful where sun is limited in typical urban plots for town-gardeners. |
| Large container on balcony or terrace |
Grown in a sturdy 40–50 litre pot with a trellis or obelisk, it offers those without borders a substantial vertical accent and scented summer display, while the own-root form provides stable performance over many years for balcony-owners. |
| Long-season focal arch |
Its repeat-flowering nature produces a generous second flush, so an arch over a path or gate stays attractive well beyond June, giving months of gentle colour and scent with minimal deadheading or spraying for low-maintenance-seekers. |
| Low-intervention coastal fence run |
Along exposed boundaries it copes with blustery showers and British coastal conditions, forming a durable, flowing line of growth that needs only periodic pruning to keep in shape, a practical choice for informal screens for weekend-gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Shingle-Veranda Arch – Train New Dawn over a simple arch emerging from shingle with sea kale and Festuca at the base for a light, seaside feel – for coastal-lovers wanting an airy wind-filter rather than a solid barrier.
- Tea-Corner Pergola – Cover a compact pergola above a small decking area, underplant with lavender and Santolina for scent and texture – for homeowners creating a calm spot for morning coffee or evening tea.
- Softened-Garage Wall – Use tension wires against a garage or side wall to create vertical fans of foliage and blossom, underplanted with Gypsophila – for busy-gardeners keen to soften hard boundaries with little fuss.
- Romantic-Balcony Pot – Plant in a 50 litre container with a slim obelisk and trailing thyme at the rim to save floor space – for balcony-owners seeking a long-lived, scented feature without complex care.
- Family-Garden Screen – Let it clothe a boundary fence, leaving room in front for lawn and play while still adding height and summer fragrance – for families needing privacy and beauty in an average-sized garden.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
New Dawn is a large-flowered climbing rose; ARS exhibition name ‘New Dawn’, commercial type climbing rose, unregistered as a formal cultivar but widely standardised in trade. |
| Origin and breeding |
Selected as a sport of ‘Dr. W. Van Fleet’ by Henry F. Bosenberg, Somerset Rose Nursery, New Jersey, USA; bred around 1930 and introduced to commerce in the same year. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the RHS Award of Garden Merit, WFRS World’s Favourite Rose / Hall of Fame (1997), and Earth-Kind certification from Texas A&M University, confirming its reliability and garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous climbing habit to about 320–500 cm high and 200–320 cm spread, moderately dense mid-green foliage, moderately thorny stems, suitable for training on arches, pergolas, walls and larger fences. |
| Flower morphology |
Double, cup-shaped blooms with 26–39 petals, typically borne singly on the stems; large flowers around 7–10 cm, repeating well with a particularly generous second flush in favourable conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pale, shell-pink flowers with a pearlescent sheen, buds opening mid pink then fading towards near-white; colour softens faster in strong sun but remains fresher and more saturated in cooler conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Noticeably scented with a fresh, moderately strong fruity character; perfume is evident on still, mild days and adds to the rose’s appeal around seating areas and garden paths where it can be appreciated. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces small numbers of ellipsoidal hips, about 12–18 mm across, coloured orange-red and offering modest ornamental interest if flowering shoots are not routinely pruned back after blooming. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4), with good overall disease resistance; generally resilient to mildew and rust, with only moderate susceptibility to black spot. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best planted with 240–400 cm spacing depending on structure; prefers well-drained soil, tolerates partial shade and some drought with watering in dry spells, and suits low-maintenance training on supports. |
New Dawn offers vigorous vertical coverage, repeat flowering and a reliable, long-lived own-root framework that settles in for years of pale pink bloom; an excellent choice if you would like a quietly dependable climber.