PINK ROADRUNNER – pink park rose - Uhl
Imagine sitting down with a cup of tea after a blustery walk, sheltered behind a low bank of pink blooms that ripple like waves across your coastal garden. Roadrunner is bred to spread quickly yet stay compact, forming a dense, low shrub that works beautifully in small family plots and breezy verandas. Its semi-double flowers offer a soft, open heart that is particularly friendly to pollinators, while the rich mid-pink colouring stays fresh and clear through much of the summer. Selected by Kordes and backed by respected ADR certification, this variety has proven staying power and reliable health, even where salt-laden winds meet heavier soils and careful drainage is essential. The own-root form develops steadily for a long life: strong groundcover in the first seasons, then fuller flowering structure, and by the third year a settled, enduring shrub presence that needs little more than an occasional tidy, perfect for relaxed beginners.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Low-maintenance coastal front garden |
Compact height and slightly spreading growth make it ideal for exposed front gardens, where it forms a sheltered, flowering edge without blocking light. Own-root resilience supports long-term structure for busy urban gardeners. |
| Groundcover on a sunny slope |
Its vigorous, bushy habit and dense foliage help knit together sloping ground, reducing bare patches and visual gaps while giving months of colour. The steady own-root framework offers lasting cover for practical family gardeners. |
| Container on a coastal veranda (50–70 L) |
A large container lets the roots anchor and drain well, so it copes calmly with salty breezes and variable watering. The compact spread suits verandas where you want flowers close to seating for coastal-style enthusiasts. |
| Mixed pink border in a small family garden |
Mid-pink, semi-double flowers blend easily with perennials and grasses, giving a soft, informal look that does not overwhelm a modest plot. Its own-root habit means the planting matures steadily for homeowners seeking reliability. |
| Pollinator-friendly corner by a patio |
Semi-double, cup-shaped blooms with exposed stamens offer easy access to visiting insects, keeping a small outdoor sitting area lively and engaging through the main season for wildlife-conscious beginners. |
| Informal low hedge along a path |
Planting at hedge spacing creates a low, flowering ribbon that guides the eye and softens path edges without demanding precise clipping, ideal when you prefer gentle shaping over frequent pruning for time-poor gardeners. |
| Family play-area backdrop |
The bushy, slightly spreading form builds a soft floral backdrop that frames lawns or play spaces, while own-root strength supports recovery after the odd knock or accidental break, reassuring for families with active children. |
| Clay-based garden beds with improved drainage |
Once planted into well-prepared, freely draining clay, its robust, heat-tolerant nature copes well with variable British summers, giving dependable flowering where water management and good anchoring into the soil really matter for real-world UK gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Seaside Drift – weave Pink Roadrunner through sea kale, Festuca and low Lavandula in a wide shingle strip for a relaxed, Cornish-beach feel – ideal for coastal veranda owners
- Pink Carpet – mass-plant as a groundcover ribbon along a drive, underplanting with spring bulbs that emerge through the foliage – suited to low-maintenance front gardens
- Teatime Nook – place one in a 60 L pot near bistro chairs, with trailing Campanula at the rim, so summer flowers sit at table height – perfect for small patio spaces
- Soft Hedge – line a path with evenly spaced plants, interspersed with airy grasses, to create a loose, flowering boundary that sways in the wind – for informal cottage-style schemes
- Playful Border – combine with hardy geraniums and dwarf Hostas at the front of a family bed, letting its bushy shape knit the planting together – great for relaxed, child-friendly gardens
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Roadrunner collection groundcover and shrub rose; registered as UHLarium, marketed as Pink Roadrunner / Roadrunner, shrub park type suited to garden, park and container use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Jürgen Walter Uhl for W. Kordes’ Söhne in Germany, introduced 2001; selection aimed at vigorous, spreading groundcover habit with reliable remontant flowering in varied climates. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds ADR certification from 2003, confirming independently tested garden performance with reliable health, ornamental value and repeat flowering under low-input maintenance conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, slightly spreading shrub reaching about 60–90 cm high and 60–100 cm wide, forming dense dark green foliage with glossy leaves and a noticeably thorny framework over time. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped cluster blooms of medium size, typically 13–25 petals, borne freely in trusses with strong remontant character and a particularly abundant second flush in season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Clear mid-pink with subtle purplish tone, ARS mp, RHS 67B–67C; buds deep pink, opening to rich mid-pink, later fading paler with silvery petal edges before ageing to a soft pastel tone. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Described as a strong, far-reaching scent despite semi-double form; fragrance character not formally classified, but noticeable around the plant in warm, still conditions in the main season. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces bright red, spherical hips, about 15–22 mm in diameter, adding late-season interest if spent flowers are left to set, while also providing potential food value for garden birds. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Very hardy to around −34 to −37 °C (RHS H7, USDA 3b); good heat and drought tolerance; resistant to black spot, with moderate tolerance to powdery mildew and rust in typical seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best at 40–80 cm spacings; 4–5 plants/m² for groundcover. Suits beds, slopes, parks and large pots; prefers sun to light shade, with occasional pest and disease checks as needed. |
PINK ROADRUNNER offers vigorous groundcover colour, pollinator-friendly blooms and proven ADR-backed resilience in a long-lived own-root form; consider it where you want dependable pink impact with little fuss.