ORANGE DAWN – orange climbing rose – Warner
Bring a touch of coastal sunrise to your garden with Orange Dawn, a medium-height climbing rose that fits beautifully into family-sized plots and compact verandas. Its clear, vivid blooms sit above moderately dense, mid-green foliage, creating an easy, uplifting backdrop for seaside-style seating areas and shingle beds. Once established, its own-root structure gives reassuring stability and long-term resilience, ideal where strong breezes meet light salt spray and free-draining but improved clay soils. Mild, citrusy fragrance lends gentle refreshment to morning tea after a walk on the beach, while repeat-flowering clusters extend colour reliably through the season. In a roomy 40–50 litre container or trained on a simple support, it develops steadily from roots in the first year to stronger shoots in the second and full ornamental presence by the third, with medium-care maintenance that remains manageable for time-pressed gardeners and beginners alike.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda windbreak |
Medium-height climbing growth (around 2–3 m) allows you to train ORANGE DAWN along railings or a light trellis, giving a loose wind-filter rather than a dense wall and suiting breezy, salt-tinged patios without overwhelming the space; perfect for the relaxed coastal-style beginner. |
| Compact family garden pergola |
With a spread of 1.2–2 m and moderate vigour, this climber dresses small pergolas or swing frames gracefully, offering long-season orange colour without excessive pruning, so you gain vertical interest and family shade with only occasional care for the busy homeowner. |
| Shingle or gravel seating nook |
Trained on a simple obelisk or wall frame above shingle, its own-root stamina and H7 hardiness support long-lived planting that copes well with reflected heat, giving you a bright, tidy focal point beside garden chairs that suits low-fuss hobby-gardeners. |
| Large container on sheltered balcony |
In a 40–50 litre pot with good drainage, ORANGE DAWN climbs reliably without becoming unmanageable, making it an excellent choice for renters or small-plot owners who want a long-lived rose that can move with them, ideal for space-conscious urbanites. |
| Espalier on sunny house wall |
Its moderately dense, mid-green foliage and repeat-flowering clusters lend themselves to simple fan-training on wires, giving a calm, structured backdrop that softens brick while remaining easier to handle than very vigorous climbers, suiting design-aware beginners. |
| Season-long colour feature near terrace |
Remontant flowering with an abundant second flush ensures that, after an early display, you enjoy further waves of soft to vivid orange blooms, so the rose continues to earn its place beside everyday seating areas for colour-loving families. |
| Low-input, long-term planting scheme |
Own-root cultivation supports good regeneration and a long lifespan, so even if tops suffer in a harsh winter or from pruning mistakes, new shoots arise from the base, protecting your investment and simplifying long-term planning for cautious gardeners. |
| Warm, exposed corner of the garden |
Good heat tolerance and robust hardiness help it thrive in sun-trapping, breezy spots that might challenge fussier roses, giving you reliable structure and colour where you most feel the weather, particularly appealing to coastal and climate-aware owners. |
Styling ideas
- Harbour-porch arch – Train ORANGE DAWN over a compact arch by the front door, underplant with sea kale and blue Festuca for a soft maritime feel – ideal for coastal-style lovers.
- Sunset-terrace trio – In a 50 litre container, pair the climber with low Lavandula and dwarf box for a fragrant, tidy terrace vignette – suited to busy urban balcony owners.
- Shingle-retreat screen – Use two plants on slim trellises flanking a bench on gravel, adding Bupleurum for airy texture – perfect for hobby gardeners creating a quiet reading corner.
- Cottage-coast wall – Fan-train along a sunny wall, weaving between Ceanothus for blue-and-orange contrast and a soft seaside cottage impression – for homeowners refitting small gardens.
- Family-pergola lane – Plant at pergola posts at recommended spacing, letting clusters frame a path while still walk-through friendly – attractive to families wanting simple structure and colour.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Climbing rose, large-flowered climber group; registered as CHEworangedawn, marketed as ORANGE DAWN – orange climbing rose – Warner; exhibition category climbing rose for garden use on supports. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Christopher H. Warner, United Kingdom, from ‘Dawn Chorus’ × unknown seedling; bred 2006 and registered 2006, introduced 2007 via Rosen-Union e.G. in Germany. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised at New Zealand Rose Trials with a Certificate of Merit in 2006, later awarded Best Climber at the Hamilton New Zealand Rose Trials in 2011, confirming strong ornamental garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Medium-vigour climber reaching about 200–300 cm high and 120–200 cm spread; moderately thorny, with mid-green, slightly glossy foliage of moderate density, suitable for training on arches, walls or pergolas. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, cup-shaped blooms (approximately 7–10 cm) with 26–39 petals; produced in clusters with remontant behaviour, including an abundant second flush in favourable conditions across the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Clear orange base colour (ARS OB; RHS 34A outer, 31B inner), buds deep orange with reddish hints; flowers open to bright orange, then soften and pale slightly in strong sun, giving a gentle tonal progression. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, subtle fragrance with a citrus and orange-peel character; not overpowering near seating areas yet present enough to add freshness in still conditions, especially appreciated at close range in sheltered garden corners. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set generally limited due to the full double bloom; when present, small spherical hips about 8–12 mm across develop, coloured orange-red and offering modest late-season decorative interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7; Swedish Zone 4; USDA 5b); medium resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, benefiting from routine monitoring and timely, targeted protection. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to arches, pergolas, walls and espaliers; spacing 140–250 cm depending on use, with 0.4–0.5 plants/m² for massing; tolerates partial shade and heat but needs watering in prolonged drought and medium-level care. |
ORANGE DAWN – orange climbing rose – Warner offers long-lived own-root reliability, season-long orange colour and a manageable medium height for arches or verandas, making it a considered choice if you value durable coastal-style structure.