PERENNIAL BLUE™ – purple climbing rambler rose – Mehring
Imagine sipping tea behind a living windbreak of colour after a breezy walk on the beach: PERENNIAL BLUE™ creates an airy screen that copes gracefully with blustery, salt‑touched British coastal weather while weaving refreshment into your everyday garden views. Its cascading trusses of mauve‑purple flowers bring a subtly romantic girly note to pergolas, porches and shingle plots, yet demand only straightforward care from busy homeowners. Trained along a fence or veranda rail, it forms a soft, enveloping anchor for small family gardens, giving reliable seasonal interest from spring into autumn. As an own‑root rose it builds a naturally long‑lived, steady structure that shrugs off occasional setbacks. Think of its development as a gentle progression – roots in year one, shoots in year two, and full ornamental character in year three – rewarding patience with a stable, enduring display. Its medium vigour suits modest spaces, and its repeat flowering keeps the mood quietly sunny, fitting beautifully beside sea kale, silvery grasses and low‑maintenance containers on sheltered patios. With ADR‑level resilience, semi‑double clusters that lightly tempt pollinators, and manageable upkeep, PERENNIAL BLUE™ brings a relaxed coastal mood to everyday gardens without asking you to be a specialist gardener.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small coastal veranda windbreak |
Ideal where you want a light, flowering screen rather than a solid wall, this rambler can be trained along balustrades or tensioned wires to filter onshore breezes while still letting in sun, perfect for a relaxed cup of tea for the beginner. |
| Family pergola over seating |
Its medium vigour and cluster-flowered habit make it well suited to a family pergola, clothing the structure in cascading purple trusses without overwhelming the space, creating dappled shade and a romantic setting that even time-pressed parents can enjoy as homeowners. |
| Fence or boundary accent in clay soil |
Once planted into improved, free-draining pockets within heavier clay, its strong root system helps anchor the plant securely and support long-term flowering, turning a plain boundary into a softly textured feature that rewards patient coastal-style gardeners. |
| Compact feature arch by the front door |
Its relatively modest flower size and repeat flushes suit small arches, giving a welcoming, informal cascade of mauve-purple without the pruning demands of very vigorous ramblers, an attractive solution for style-conscious but busy beginners. |
| Large container on sheltered balcony (40–60 L) |
In a 40–60 litre container with good drainage, PERENNIAL BLUE™ can be trained on a slim obelisk or trellis, bringing vertical colour to balconies or roof terraces where border space is limited, an accessible way into roses for urban coastal-style homeowners. |
| Shingle or gravel garden focal point |
Set into pockets of enriched soil within shingle, it rises above low grasses and sea-kale-style planting, its arching shoots adding movement and height that echo the shoreline while remaining easy to maintain for relaxed, design-led coastal gardeners. |
| Season-long colour backdrop for family play areas |
Positioned at the back of a border, its repeat-flowering clusters provide a long, colourful backdrop to lawns or play spaces without constant fussing, letting you enjoy evolving seasonal interest around everyday family life as a time-poor beginner. |
| Long-lived feature for low-maintenance gardens |
As an own-root climbing rambler with ADR recognition, it offers dependable structure and flower quality over many years; after its first establishing seasons it settles into a steady rhythm with straightforward care, suiting long-term planners and pragmatic homeowners. |
Styling ideas
- Coastal-veranda screen – Train PERENNIAL BLUE™ along a veranda rail with sea kale and blue Festuca below for a breezy seaside feel – ideal for coastal-style lovers wanting impact from limited space.
- Romantic pergola – Drape it over a compact pergola with lavender and white foxgloves for soft, layered colour and dappled shade – perfect for families seeking an easy, pretty retreat.
- Front-door arch – Combine a slim arch of PERENNIAL BLUE™ with dwarf French marigolds at the base for a cheerful welcome – suited to beginners who prefer simple planting schemes.
- Balcony vertical garden – Grow it in a 40–60 litre pot on a tall obelisk, underplanted with trailing thyme and low grasses – a smart solution for urban homeowners with only a balcony or roof terrace.
- Shingle feature strip – Set it against a fence in a gravel garden with cypress spurge and ornamental chives for texture and colour – attractive for gardeners wanting low-input, coastal-inspired planting.
Technical cultivar profile
| Trait | Data |
| Name and registration |
Rambler and large-flowered climbing rose; registered as Mehv9601, marketed as PERENNIAL BLUE™ and Perennial. Approved exhibition name PERENNIAL BLUE under American Rose Society classification. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Bernard F. Mehring in the United Kingdom from Super Excelsa × Veilchenblau, introduced by Eurosa (Germany) in 2003 for garden and exhibition use across temperate regions. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holder of the prestigious ADR (Germany, 2013) quality mark, Baden-Baden Silver Medal in 2006 and first prize at Baden bei Wien in 2014, confirming ornamental value and dependable performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Climbing rambler with arching shoots, typically 240–380 cm high and 150–260 cm spread, moderately thorny with mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and medium density, suited to supports and training. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped blooms with 13–25 petals, produced in large clusters. Small flower size (around 0.5–1.5 inches) but carried in generous trusses, giving strong overall visual impact. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Mid-saturated crimson-purple with silvery bloom and bluish tinge in cool weather. Newly opened flowers vivid mauve-purple; colour fades to greyish lilac in strong sun yet remains attractive across repeat flushes. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very light fragrance, described as fresh with a faint fruity character. Scent is modest rather than dominant, suiting those who prioritise colour effect and flower quantity over strong perfume. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate quantities of small, spherical red hips about 6–10 mm in diameter, offering an additional late-season accent where spent clusters are not removed after flowering. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7 with approximate hardiness between −21 and −18 °C, USDA zone 6b, displaying medium resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust when given reasonable air circulation and care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best on pergolas, arches, fences or walls at 190–300 cm spacing; prefers moderate watering and can accept partial shade. Own-root potted form simplifies establishment for typical family gardens. |
PERENNIAL BLUE™ offers romantic repeat-flowering clusters, adaptable use from veranda screens to pergolas, and the steady reliability of an own-root climber; consider it if you want long-lived coastal charm with manageable care.