REPORTER – red climbing rose – Tantau
Bring a touch of coastal drama to your garden with REPORTER, a vigorous red climbing rose that thrives where sea breezes meet sunny walls. Its deep, velvety blooms create a bold screen of colour on fences, arches and pergolas, ideal for framing a veranda or sheltering a seating nook from onshore winds and salt-laden air by providing reliable structure and cover. Semi-double clusters in vivid scarlet invite bees in, while the own-root habit offers reassuring longevity, steady recovery after harsh weather, and a calmly manageable maintenance routine for busy coastal households. In a 40–50 litre container or open ground, it anchors well yet remains adaptable to typical family-garden layouts. Over time it progresses from root establishment, through expanding shoots, to full ornamental impact by the third year, giving you a dependable vertical feature that matures gracefully alongside your outdoor rituals of sea air, tea breaks and shell-collecting adventures.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda windbreak |
Use REPORTER to clothe a trellis or balustrade, creating a living screen that softens onshore gusts while keeping the space bright and open; salt-tolerant structure suits exposed Cornish and Devon verandas – ideal for the coastal-style homeowner. |
| Compact family garden fence |
Its tall, relatively narrow habit makes excellent use of vertical space, giving rich colour and privacy on a typical boundary fence without occupying the small lawn or play area – a practical choice for the busy family gardener. |
| Rose arch over a garden path |
Train the flexible canes over an arch for a tunnel of scarlet blooms that repeats well through the season, providing a cheerful welcome home and a fun feature for children to walk beneath – perfect for the hobby garden owner. |
| Pergola seating corner |
Clad a pergola post-by-post to form a semi-enclosed retreat where dappled petals, light fragrance and visiting pollinators create a holiday feel, even in changeable weather with brisk sea breezes and showers – rewarding for the relaxation-focused gardener. |
| Large container on a sunny terrace |
In a 40–50 litre pot with good drainage, REPORTER performs well on patios and roof terraces, its height giving impact while roots stay contained and easy to manage – especially suitable for the space-conscious city dweller. |
| Pollinator-friendly vertical accent |
Semi-double flowers with accessible stamens provide nectar and pollen along a wall or screen, extending foraging height for bees and other insects and adding ecological value without extra effort – attractive to the wildlife-aware gardener. |
| Long-term structural planting |
Own-root growth and hardy performance support a long lifespan, building a permanent framework of canes that can be renewed gradually rather than replaced, securing ornamental value over many seasons – reassuring for the low-maintenance planner. |
| Year-on-year development project |
Plant once and watch the progression from a root-setting first year, through stronger shoots in the second, to a fully clothed structure by year three, with steady flowering throughout – motivating for the patient garden beginner. |
Styling ideas
- Seaside veranda screen – Train REPORTER along a slim trellis behind deck chairs, underplant with blue Festuca and sea kale to echo shingle tones – for coastal-style lovers seeking shelter without heaviness.
- Cornish cottage arch – Pair a rose-covered arch of REPORTER with lavender and Gaillardia at the base for a soft, informal entrance – for homeowners wanting a romantic yet easy path feature.
- Modern red statement – Grow in a generous charcoal container with gravel mulch and simple sea-holly accents for a clean, architectural look – for urban verandas aiming at bold colour with minimal fuss.
- Wildlife lane – Let REPORTER climb a sunny fence, interplanted below with hemp agrimony and obedient plant to extend nectar season – for gardeners keen to support bees and butterflies.
- Family pergola retreat – Cover a corner pergola post with REPORTER and mix in soft ornamental grasses beneath to create a calm nook for evening tea – for families wanting a relaxing coastal-feel hideaway.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Climbing rose from Rosen Tantau, registered as TANklesant, marketed as REPORTER – red climbing rose – Tantau; also known in exhibitions as Santana, within the large-flowered climber group. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Mathias Tantau Jr. at Rosen Tantau, Uetersen, Germany; parentage undocumented, developed as a vigorous climbing selection for ornamental use on structures and taller garden features. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Strong climbing habit reaching about 225–375 cm high with 110–190 cm spread; dense, glossy dark green foliage and thorny canes provide good coverage for arches, pergolas, fences and training wires. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped clusters with roughly 13–25 petals per bloom; medium-sized flowers around 4–7 cm across, repeating well through the season, with a notably abundant second flush on established plants. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Near-black buds open to velvety deep red, then bright scarlet with a darker centre, finally softening towards cherry red; colour retention moderate, giving a dynamic, multi-toned display on each flowering truss. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Light, restrained rose scent that lends a gentle background aroma around paths and seating without overwhelming small spaces; well suited to verandas and family gardens where subtlety is preferred. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms moderately abundant ovoid hips about 10–18 mm in diameter; bright red colouring adds late-season interest and can support birds and wildlife once flowering has reduced towards autumn. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Medium disease resistance with occasional protection helpful against mildew, black spot and rust; hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b), suitable for most UK gardens given reasonable care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; allow space for height and tie in new shoots. For structures, plant about 140–230 cm apart; in massed schemes use roughly 0.4–0.5 plants per square metre. |
REPORTER – red climbing rose – Tantau offers vivid vertical colour, reliable repeat flowering and long-lived own-root performance, making it a thoughtful choice for relaxed, low-effort coastal and family gardens.