AUSDIR – dark crimson English rose - Austin
Imagine returning from a breezy shoreline walk to enjoy tea behind a gentle rose windbreak: AUSDIR settles in steadily, offering velvety blooms and dependable remontant flowering from late spring into autumn. Its upright, moderately tall habit is easy to fit into typical family plots, while own-root resilience means it grows into a long-lived, structurally stable feature with reliable regrowth after pruning. In UK coastal gardens it copes with brisk weather and exposed corners by forming a naturally anchoring framework that manages wind and rain around the house. The richly double, wine-red flowers bring a romantic atmosphere to shingle-style borders, and the strong, old-rose fragrance makes sitting out on a veranda feel quietly luxurious. Maintenance is comfortable for hobby gardeners: medium care, occasional deadheading where self-cleaning is limited, but without demanding specialist knowledge. Over the first three years it follows a gentle development arc – first roots, then shoots, and finally full ornamental value – giving you time to enjoy the evolving structure of your planting.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda windbreak |
The upright, moderately tall framework creates a soft, living barrier that calms brisk sea breezes without feeling solid or overbearing, offering shelter for deck chairs and a small table in gardens where wind and rain are channelled around the house; ideal for the coastal-style lover. |
| Small shingle or gravel border |
Its bushy footprint, around 1–1.9 m across, fits comfortably into compact shingle beds, with roots that stabilise loose ground and foliage that stays presentable between flushes, making a single plant feel generous in a limited area for the beginner. |
| Feature rose in a large container |
Planted in a 40–50 litre or larger pot, it develops a stable own-root system that supports repeated flowering and recovery after pruning, giving long-term value on a balcony or terrace without needing frequent replacement, suiting the busy homeowner. |
| Romantic seating-area backdrop |
The very double, cupped rosettes in deep wine-red create an intimate, dusk-friendly background behind benches or bistro sets, while the strong old-rose scent enhances quiet evenings outdoors, making it appealing to the tea-drinking gardener. |
| Long-season mixed shrub border |
With remontant flowering and an abundant second flush, it punctuates a border from early summer onwards, providing consistent colour between perennials and ornamental grasses and reducing the need for complex succession planning for the time-poor gardener. |
| Against warm house walls or fences |
Its moderate height and slightly spreading, upright habit suit training along wires or a low framework, allowing you to shape a vertical accent that copes well with breezy, rainy exposure near buildings, reassuring for the exposed-garden owner. |
| Clay-soil family garden bed |
Once established with sensible drainage, the own-root plant forms a durable structure that copes reliably with typical British clay, so occasional waterlogging followed by drying cycles are less of a concern over the years for the practical gardener. |
| Cutting patch for home arrangements |
The medium-sized, very double blooms with strong fragrance and good colour retention make excellent, characterful stems for vases, allowing you to enjoy the rose indoors as well as outside without relying on florist-bought flowers, pleasing the home arranger. |
Styling ideas
- Cornish Veranda Nook – Combine AUSDIR in a large container with blue Festuca and a low Lavandula hedge to frame a sheltered seating corner that echoes coastal hues – for relaxed tea-drinkers by the sea.
- Shingle Romance – Set one or two plants in a pale shingle bed with sea kale and grey santolina to contrast velvety dark blooms against soft, maritime foliage – for lovers of windswept, feminine coastal charm.
- Old-Rose Evening Corner – Place near a bench and underplant with dusky Penstemon digitalis ‘Husker Red’ so fragrance and crimson tones enrich calm twilight chats – for those who unwind outdoors after work.
- Clay-Garden Anchor – Use as the structural centre of a mixed shrub group on improved clay, flanked by hardy perennials, to provide long-term form and reliable repeated flowering – for family gardeners wanting stability.
- Balcony Feature Pot – Grow in a 50 litre tub with trailing silver foliage plants to highlight the rich red rosettes and strong scent close to doors or railings – for urban homeowners making the most of limited space.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Registered as AUSdir, marketed as Tradescant within the English Rose Collection; a modern shrub/climbing type presenting as a dark crimson English rose for garden and display use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by David C. H. Austin in the United Kingdom (1992), from ‘Prospero’ (Auspero) × (Charles Austin × ‘Gloire de Ducher’); introduced by David Austin Roses Ltd. after 1994 and registered 1994. |
| Awards and recognition |
Modern Shrub Rose winner at Cleveland & Northeastern Ohio (1999), Grand Valley, Michigan (1999) and Sacramento Rose Society (2000), reflecting strong show performance and exhibitor confidence. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, slightly spreading shrub with moderately dense, dark green, slightly glossy foliage; height 120–210 cm, spread 100–190 cm, moderately thorny stems, forming a robust, medium-sized garden presence. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, rosette-shaped flowers with over 40 petals, medium-sized clusters on branching stems; remontant, with a notably abundant second flush when watered and deadheaded appropriately in typical garden care. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Dark crimson-red, velvety blooms (RHS 60A outer, 187B inner) with wine-red to blackish-purple tones; colour generally deepens towards crimson-purple, with good retention and relatively limited fading in sun. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, pronounced fragrance of slightly sweet old-rose character; highly noticeable near seating areas or open windows, though densely double flowers limit pollen access and make it primarily ornamental. |
| Hip characteristics |
Very double flowers usually prevent significant hip set; only occasional, tiny hips up to around 2 mm may develop, so decorative autumn fruit effect is minimal and rarely a design feature. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately –26 to –23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish Zone 4); medium resistance to black spot, mildew and rust, with heat tolerance if watered regularly in prolonged dry conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to borders, specimens, cutting and training against walls; prefers well-drained soil, regular watering in heat, and medium maintenance with periodic deadheading and health checks for balanced performance. |
AUSDIR combines long-season crimson flowering, strong old-rose fragrance and durable own-root structure to reward modest care with lasting impact in compact gardens and coastal corners, making it a thoughtful choice if you value dependable beauty over many years.